Two question

<p>So I got married on December 12th. I want to know if I need to report this change (since it will effect my financial information obviously) or if I can just leave it as is because what I put in the application was accurate at the time of submission. If I need to report this could anyone point me in the right direction of where to go?</p>

<p>Also recently a classmate told me you needed 100 years of US history to graduate from college. Is that true?</p>

<p>Thanks to anyone who responds.</p>

<p>I’m not sure about the answer to your first question, but UCLA at least requires that you have one class in either U.S History or Government to receive a Bachelor’s degree. As long as you took it in high school or a took a semester of it in college, you should be just fine. Not sure about other colleges.</p>

<p>(Please correct me if I’m wrong – I’m not sure, this was the information given to me by UCLA when I phoned them to ask about the same thing.)</p>

<p>Hiroshi66 is right - you need to take either US history or a government class. I would just like to add that this is a UC graduation requirement, and not an admission requirement. If for some reason you haven’t completed this you may do so at a UC.</p>

<p>Just to confirm with you, Rpicton, it’s either one or the other, right? I took a semester of U.S History but did not take a Political Science/Government course. This would fulfill the requirement?</p>

<p>Yes. 10char
Here are some official responses:

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<p>You can even take the class P/NP if you don’t want to harm your GPA with tough teachers.</p>

<p>I see. Looks like I’m good to go!</p>

<p>Thanks for the information, Rpicton.</p>