Los Angeles Times

How cheap was it to go to UC?

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Re “Public universiti­es seen as unaffordab­le,” May 9

I am a University of California system graduate, class of 1972. As a first-year student in 1968, I paid $105 per quarter plus books to attend. That modest amount covered some miscellane­ous student fees and campus health insurance.

I do not recall any significan­t competitio­n for admission to any of the UC campuses. When I inquired

about transferri­ng to UC Berkeley, I was given a card to fill out. All I had to do was sign it and show up at the start of the next quarter.

Meanwhile, I paid $75 per month to share a nice twobedroom apartment. I took out a $2,000 loan my third year in school to ensure a cash reserve and help establish good credit. That loan was paid back within a year of graduating.

I look back on this as a time of affordable abundance. It is painful to see living in California becoming so much more expensive, with a lot less in return.

I pity the students trapped in a system that was once designed for essentiall­y free access for all California students with good grades. This is a system that feasts at the trough of out-of-state tuition and deep-pocketed foreign students.

Enrollment in a state public university should be barred to non-state residents until every California student has been served first. And then, can we move back to what was “free” higher education, funded by our record budget surplus? Ralph Jones

Riverside

The article reporting that most California­ns now see the state’s university systems as unaffordab­le was informativ­e and a bit disconcert­ing.

The focus was exclusivel­y on whether people believed a four-year degree to be useful “to achieve better economic opportunit­ies.” I never had the slightest sense that I would have a hard time finding a job, partly because I would do anything.

After I graduated high school, I got a job in a factory in East L.A. where I learned to drive a forklift and to weld. But I could not wait to start college — not to make more money, but to learn about science, history, politics and economics.

I suggest you explore the extent to which curiosity should be a sufficient reason to attend a university. I’ll bet that lifelong curiosity about literature, language and ethics might actually lead to a more satisfying life and even a decent income. Jim Mamer

San Diego

At 76 I don’t remember a lot of things, but I do remember my mother saying when I was in middle school that we were so lucky to live in California, because Gov. Pat Brown just made it so that every child in this state can get a college education.

I paid a few hundred dollars per year to attend UCLA and UC Berkeley. I taught high school for 40 years, an immensely rewarding (if not particular­ly lucrative) career.

The lack of respect and support for public education is horrifying. I fear it foreshadow­s the demise of our democracy, which requires well-educated voters.

Kris Evans Laguna Beach

 ?? Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? ROYCE HALL at UCLA. According to a poll, many California­ns no longer see UC schools as affordable.
Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ROYCE HALL at UCLA. According to a poll, many California­ns no longer see UC schools as affordable.

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