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Letters: Reagan and a radicalizing UC

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Re “Reagan and the fall of UC,” Opinion, May 10

Seth Rosenfeld argues that then-Gov. Ronald Reagan’s opposition to the 1960s radicalization of the University of California campuses — Berkeley in particular — was the main driver in the decline of the UC system. He overlooks that this very radicalization has diminished the value of a UC education.

In the 1950s, when the UC system was at its peak, students were “well groomed and complacent” (to use Rosenfeld’s words). They were in college to learn, not to protest.

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The radicalization Reagan opposed continues to worsen, and the UC system continues to lose prestige. Maybe there’s a connection.

Bruce Bates

Coto de Caza

When I was attending Indiana University in the 1960s and paying more than $1,000 in tuition, I thought the UC campuses must have been heaven. There was great weather, and California residents paid no tuition.

When I moved to California in the late 1970s and started teaching high school here, I was shocked at the crummy conditions in the public schools: overcrowded classrooms, outdated textbooks, shabby rooms and a disrespect for teachers that I see started with Reagan as governor.

I was here in the 1980s when then-Gov. George Deukmejian had the community colleges start charging tuition.

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Rosenfeld reminds us that the deterioration of California’s great educational system began during my lifetime. For my college-age daughter’s sake, I hope we can rebuild that system, also within my lifetime.

Cheryl Clark

Long Beach

It’s not just the UC system, of which I am an alumnus, that suffered under Reagan. Mental health care, public works, you name it — their weakening under Reagan helped begin the decline of California.

Alan Miller

Santiago, Chile

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