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Increased Financial Aid Can Increase Demand for Basic Needs Services
A new survey from New Mexico shows that nearly 60 percent of students are food insecure. Experts say that number likely rose when the state’s free-tuition program made college more accessible for low-income learners.

FAFSA Night Live!
In Kentucky, federal student aid form completion is down by double digits from last year. State officials hosted a 12-hour telethon in a castle to help close the gap.
Holy Cross Donor Sues to Recoup $21 Million
GAO: Half of Borrowers Were Current on Loan Payments in January

Columbia President Minouche Shafik Resigns Unexpectedly
After a little more than a year in the position, she becomes the third college president to lose her job after testifying before Congress about antisemitism on campus.

Lackawanna, Peirce Announce Plans to Merge
The two adult-oriented institutions in Pennsylvania hope that, by joining forces, they can expand their reach and access to higher education.

Bursting the Idea of the ‘Campus Bubble’
A new book says the diverse experiences of Harvard undergrads during the COVID-19 pandemic carry larger lessons for higher ed—namely that the off-campus lives of low-income students deeply affect their lives on campus.

Indiana Argues Professors Lack First Amendment Rights in Public Classrooms
Defending a new law requiring “intellectual diversity” from professors, the Indiana attorney general echoes Florida and asserts that “curriculum of a public university is government speech.”
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