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<p>In my opinion (and definition), such person is not out-of-state (‘OOS’) but out-of-country. Different cases. (An OOS’er has plenty of instate options, some/many will be free to them if they have the stats to get into Cal/UCLA. And, following your example, I would hope that an econ prospie would see the value in a free education.)</p>
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<p>Please don’t put words in other people’s posts. You are too smart for that. :)</p>