Media Coverage
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The New York Times
Education Department Backs Away From Program for Hispanic-Serving Colleges
“We’re trying to be an institution of access,” said Cynthia Larive, chancellor of the University of California, Santa Cruz. “This is a broader issue. It’s really about how the U.S. is going to be a leader economically and in science and research. There are smart people across the country, and we don’t alway serve all…
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Smithsonian Magazine
These Lizards Have So Much Lead in Their Blood, They Should Be Dead. Instead, They’re Thriving
“The fact that they show no measurable signs of toxicity is surprising, because in other vertebrates I’m familiar with, blood lead above 500 micrograms per deciliter is associated with obvious illness or even death,” says Donald Smith, a microbiologist at the University of California Santa Cruz who was not involved with the research, to the…
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The Mercury News
Pirates, brothels and … the Bard? One of Shakespeare’s least-known plays gets rediscovered in Santa Cruz
The majority of the play “Pericles” is so far from Shakespeare’s style that many scholars believe the first two acts were written by someone else entirely — possibly George Wilkins. “What Shakespeare scholars tend to do is when they encounter something that they don’t like in Shakespeare, they say someone else wrote it,” said Sean…
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SFGate
A world-renowned California scientist’s career is defined by chance
The minutes pass into hours as the swell rises and falls like craggy rock formations, lulling me into a meditative state. But the man at the helm, Ari Friedlaender, is on high alert. With a ball cap and sunglasses shielding his bearded face, and a pair of flip-flops on his feet, the world-renowned ecologist and…
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Scientific American
How RNA Unseated DNA as the Most Important Molecule in Your Body
Some of these molecules might get transcribed only in particular types of cells or at a particular stage in embryonic development, so it would be easy to miss their moment of action. “They are incredibly cell-type specific,” says molecular biologist Susan Carpenter of the University of California, Santa Cruz. But because of that, she says,…
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Santa Cruz Sentinel
Guest Commentary | Sending MAGA to Sacramento
Christine Hong, faculty in Critical Race and Ethnic Studies and Literature at UC Santa Cruz, wrote an opinion article for the Santa Cruz Sentinel about ethnic studies content in California.
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Hyperallergic
Are Art History Majors More In Demand Than Computer Scientists?
T.J. Demos, a professor of art history at the University of California, Santa Cruz says, “there’s growing evidence that art history graduates possess distinctly marketable skills, including in critical thinking, visual analysis, foreign language training, and wide knowledge of cultural heritage, which employers across sectors are highly interested in.”




