"At long last, there are signs Californians might become a little inventive in the face of financial crisis. So far, the best example of an idea for making lemonade when life has dispensed lemons comes in the higher education field, where state colleges and universities that have absorbed large budget cuts are now charging higher tuition and fees than ever — and will still turn away about 100,000 qualified students in the fall.
That situation amounts to a wholesale abandonment of California’s 1960 Master Plan for Higher Education, which guarantees a place at either the University of California or a California State University campus for every student who has done enough to qualify.
With some campuses reserving significant numbers of spaces for local residents and others turning away even those students, public universities for the first time are plainly not keeping their 50-year-old promise."
That situation amounts to a wholesale abandonment of California’s 1960 Master Plan for Higher Education, which guarantees a place at either the University of California or a California State University campus for every student who has done enough to qualify.
With some campuses reserving significant numbers of spaces for local residents and others turning away even those students, public universities for the first time are plainly not keeping their 50-year-old promise."