An Explanation of My Withdrawal from Cal 
http://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com/issue/2011-09-18/article/38407?headline=An-Explanation-of-My-Withdrawal-from-Cal
 



Ruby Pipes 
Monday September 19, 2011 




When I received my notification of acceptance from University of California, 
Berkeley I cried. I called my father and he wept. There was screaming and 
cheering and days of telling everyone I could about my incredible good fortune. 
As if I had won the lottery. I mean, really, I’d been accepted into the best 
public university in the world. Best in the world. Me: a two-time community 
college drop-out. Me: the girl who drank through her junior year of high 
school. Me: small-town kid from Washington state who was considered a success 
because she hadn’t gotten pregnant or addicted to methamphetamines yet. 
Everyone got a phone call. “Ruby’s going to Berkeley!” There wasn’t a 
discussion, just working out the details so that I could get down there and 
start studying. My dad tapped into IRAs and life savings. We filled out all the 
forms we had to for the financial aid package that would double my debt within 
a year. It was worth it. It was Cal. I stayed up at night reading about courses 
I could take, surfing the internet for virtual tours of the campus. Over and 
over I found myself watching Mario Savio’s infamous December speech on the 
steps of Sproul Hall. I’d make friends and family watch, too, and explain 
matter-of-factly, “I’m going to stand on those steps. I’m going to go down 
there and changing the world.” 

Less than two months later my sister and I were driving a van down the I-5 
corridor; heading to my new apartment in Oakland and to my incoming student 
orientation. We were still completely awestruck. When we saw the first exit for 
Berkeley we both screamed. I could see the Campanile on the hill for the first 
time in real life. My heart was pounding. “This is it, dude! This is where 
everything begins.” The opening speech at orientation made me cry all over 
again. 

My sister grabbed my arm and squeezed it tight. “Holy shit,” she silently 
mouthed to me as the professor told us what incredible human beings we are and 
how fantastically extraordinary we must be if we were accepted here. This theme 
was pounded into our heads over and over during the initiation process. “You 
are so lucky to be here. We could have had anyone and we wanted you.” We were 
to be grateful for this opportunity and we were to never question the 
authorities that brought us there. 

After the chaos of orientation was over, we decided to walk the three miles 
from campus to my new apartment. We left the towering white marble buildings 
and the yuppie-soaked sidewalks of Berkeley and made our way down the hill into 
Oakland. Ironic coffee shops and bookstores quickly faded out in favor of 
churches, liquor stores, and barred-up windows. The overwhelmingly white 
students of UCB disappeared and the majority population turned black. I started 
to feel sick, all clenched teeth and hard footsteps. “What the fuck, dude? I’m 
going to a school that the people who actually live here can’t afford to 
attend. How the hell are Oakland and Berkeley adjacent to each other and 
absolutely nothing alike? They did that on purpose. That is so fucked up.” 

A week later I started my first class. I was taking one class over the summer 
to get the swing of it and finish up my last admission requirement. It was an 
English class on the Black Arts Movement taught by an incredible graduate 
student. We read Amiri Baraka and Ishmael Reed. I fell in love with the honesty 
of an entire generation of people and the discussions that my professor 
facilitated were thought provoking and beautiful. The class had eleven other 
students and it was two hours of bliss, twice a week. This was what I’d come to 
Berkeley for. Learning about people that wanted to change the world and 
discussing it with the people who— in the not so distant future—would. I got a 
4.0 that term. But I was still boggled by the fact that all my neighbors were 
black and all my classmates were white. 

The fact that even though I could ride my bike to my school, it was still so 
incredibly out of reach to anyone I spent my off time with. And I began to 
question why I was paying close to $30,000 of money I didn’t have to support an 
institution that is not only not helping their community, but actually cutting 
the benefits of the people that work there. How could I go home and talk to my 
neighbors, single immigrant parents who worked on the custodial staff at Cal, 
who weren’t getting a raise this year and were facing not being able to pay 
their rent. Where the hell was my money going? It wasn’t even my money. It was 
my debt that I was willingly taking on to support a system that is so 
profoundly broken. A system that continues to raise tuition and drop standards. 
While the vital workforce is denied their promised pay increases, a new 
football stadium is built. While the students drink coffee in the Free Speech 
Movement Café, no one mentions how nothing that influential has happened at Cal 
since. I came to this school because I foolishly believed that it practiced the 
things it preached. I came to this school because I thought that I was giving 
my time and money to an institution that wanted its students to succeed and 
genuinely believed in humanity. I came to this school on a forty-year-old 
premise and a romanticized idea. 

When Mario Savio stood on the steps of Sproul on December 2, 1964 he said, 
“There is a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you 
so sick at heart, that you can't take part; you can't even passively take part, 
and you've got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the 
levers, upon all the apparatus, and you've got to make it stop.” The students 
and faculty of Cal all know this, but they do not live it. It’s the big-picture 
equivalent of standing on a street corner in Nikes, trying to get a petition to 
close sweatshops signed. Coming in, I knew that universities were corporations 
cleverly disguised as pinnacles for higher education where great minds would 
meet and build the future. I naively believed that Berkeley had to be 
different. Unfortunately, the school has had its reputation so well cemented 
that it no longer has to provide that difference. In a world where a Bachelor’s 
Degree is just another box that you are expected to check if you want to 
“succeed”, the premiere university to earn it at can let thousands of students 
pass through unnoticed without anyone raising an eyebrow. They can treat their 
employees badly. They can raise their tuition and fees in tandem with their 
administrator’s salary. They can put 500 students in a classroom and charge 
hundreds of dollars for a term’s worth of books. They can turn out a graduating 
class of privileged white kids that don’t understand a thing about the real 
world or why they are now part of the problem. I understand that this problem 
is not unique. I understand that the university system is inherently corrupt. I 
understand that the country is fundamentally broken. These are all things that 
I know—that Cal would never teach me, mind you. What I also understand is that 
being angry is not enough. That no matter how many students turn out to rallies 
about tuition hikes or talk about how Berkeley ought to take better care of its 
employees or how wrong it is that minority groups—even when they are in 
majority—are not presented with the same options and few will go to university 
we are still supporting it. We still take on the debt or hand over the cash to 
help this machine perpetuate this type of blatant corruption. 

So I had a choice to make. I could go through the next two years and continue 
to take on tens of thousands of dollars of personal debt to fuel this corrupt 
machine for a piece of a paper that may or may not do me any good. I could 
continue to put my life on hold and act as if I’m going to be able to be proud 
of the place I got my degree. Like I’m going to be able to hang it on a wall 
and go fight for human rights and social justice and not remember the employees 
on staff that were taken advantage of right in front of me while I got it. 
(Maybe even so I could get it.) I could act like the mountain of debt putting a 
choke-hold on me while I try to enter the professional world is really going to 
be worth the educational quality. Like there will be anything I got at Cal that 
I couldn’t get somewhere else for half the price and a quarter of the social 
injustice. Or I could leave. My parents raised me knowing that you vote with 
your dollar more often than your ballot. And I positively refuse to continue to 
support what the University of California system is doing. We’re here again, 
Mario Savio. It has become so odious that I must throw my body against the 
gears. It may not stop the machine, but my withdrawal most definitely won’t 
help it continue forward in this way. 





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