Last week, President Joe Biden announced plans for a student loan forgiveness plan that would forgive $10,000 in federal student loan debt for people who make less than $125,000, and additional support for those who have received Pell Grants. The plan includes more support for students from lower-income backgrounds. Two UC Santa Cruz alumni share their reactions and how it will affect them.
Education
New Cabrillo College student trustee Deviné Hardy thrives in role of student advocate she always needed
Deviné Hardy first came to Cabrillo College 18 years ago, and recalls her anger then. After bartending, coordinating circus events and running a yoga studio, she’s back at the school with the plans to graduate with three degrees in the spring. Now, she has joined the Cabrillo board of trustees as its student representative, bringing all of that experience to the task.
Man arrested for California college tuition scheme that targeted veterans
A man has been arrested for counterfeiting tuition waivers for families of veterans, duping UC and CSU schools out of more than $500,000, according to prosecutors.
UC admits record number of Californians and far fewer out-of-state students
The push to admit more Californians comes amid demands to narrow entry to out-of-state and international applicants to free more seats for residents. UC Santa Cruz cut back its admission offers for fall 2022 because it enrolled two large classes of Californians the previous two years.
Cabrillo College question: How to better serve its Hispanic students?
Cabrillo College administrators, staff and faculty finalized a report focusing on recommendations for the college to better serve its Hispanic students — who make up almost 50% of the school’s student population. President Matt Wetstein told Lookout about some of the highlights.
Earlier cancer detection: UCSC researchers working on promising ‘liquid biopsy’
Could this research, produced by Daniel Kim’s UC Santa Cruz lab of eight, lead to earlier detection and treatment for cancer, which kills more than half a million Americans a year?
Back from the dead: Corpse flower blooms after all at UC Santa Cruz
Tender, loving care from arboretum director Martin Quigley — and an unusually humid Monday — resurrected a bloom that was given up for dead over the weekend.
‘Our corpse flower is truly a corpse’: Bloom appears off for famous UCSC plant
After a false alarm and warning signs Friday, the UC Santa Cruz Arboretum delivered the news Saturday afternoon that the corpse plant would not bloom after all — to the disappointment of Santa Cruzans who had hoped to get a noseful of the flower’s infamous stench.
Livestream of corpse flower bloom at UCSC Arboretum
The corpse flower at the UC Santa Cruz Arboretum is expected to fully bloom Friday night, and staff said as of early Friday evening, it was already emitting its horrendous stench.
Corpse flower bloom at UCSC ‘not progressing,’ officials say; timing reset for Saturday afternoon — or later
False alarm: The corpse flower is now predicted to bloom Saturday afternoon, keeping its infamous decaying-meat stench away from enthusiasts for another day. Officials revised the timing after crowds gathered at the UCSC Arboretum on Friday evening, only to witness the plant still in its scrunched-up state.

