Los Angeles Times

Blind to UC’s early vision

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Re “Audit faults UC on pay for execs, reserve funds,” April 26

Gov. Pat Brown, our current governor’s father, envisioned a University of California system in which all state residents who desired a degree could obtain their dream education at our prestigiou­s schools virtually free of charge.

Creating a population of skilled graduates benefited not only students but also the state as a whole, for it produced doctors, lawyers, engineers and researcher­s of every stripe, who in turn created businesses and additional employment for others.

UC President Janet Napolitano does not seem to share that vision. Instead she has turned a thriving system’s treasury into a pork barrel for top executives, according to a state audit. She deserves to lose her job. Arline M. Mathews

Chatsworth

California has allowed the privatizat­ion of its once-great UC system while it plays with its highspeed train set.

Last week, I wrote to the dean of my alma mater, UCLA Law School, regarding her fundraisin­g pitch that featured a $20-million private grant to establish

the school as a “hub” for human rights. My daughter’s focus is human rights and legal services for the public, so I pointed out to the dean the irony that she will be attending law school in Arizona because UCLA cannot deliver an affordable education.

Sooner or later, the torches and pitchforks will come out, and UC administra­tors, with their paltry $400,000-plus salaries, will bemoan the public’s disdain for higher education. Barrington Daltrey

Riverside

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