UCLA officials are “left scrambling” after Ruckus, a free music service for college students, closed its doors unexpectedly last month, according to Jonathan Curtiss, manager of technology development for student and campus life.
With the influx of people filling up tables in campus coffee shops during the day, or in the study sessions suggested by dormitory lights late into the night, the fear of failure is palpable again at UCLA as students get back to their routines.
When the U.S. was again considering drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to offset the impending energy crisis, Steve Brye, project manager at the L.A. County Metropolitan Transport Authority, did something he deems “in the spirit of a middle-aged man buying a sports car.”
While Unicamp, UCLA’s official student charity, gets ready to send nearly 1,000 underprivileged children to an outdoor summer camp in the San Bernardino mountains, there are several other major philanthropic events students organize throughout the year raising hundreds of thousands of dollars for charity.
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