BBB:The results of the Civil Rights Act Allan Bakke, a thirty-two-year-old American of Norwegian descent, applied for admission to the University of California Medical School in 1973, and again in 1974. HE WAS REJECTED BOTH TIMES. The school acknowledged that he was QUALIFIED IN EVERY WAY FOR ADMISSION, but that he was rejected due to a special program for minority students, and that sixteen places out of an entering class of one hundred were reserved for minority students. THESE MINORITY STUDENTS DID NOT HAVE TO MEET THE MINIMUM GRADE POINT AVERAGE DEMANDED OF OTHER APPLICANTS FOR ADMISSION! This "affirmative action program" reduced the number of available slots for NON- MINORITY STUDENTS to eight-four, which had already been filled at the time of Bakke's application. (This is what Jesse Jackson and Dukakis referred to as "affirmative action" or "social justice." What it means is, that you have to hire a man who is UNQUALIFIED for the job, you have to admit a student who is unqualified to attend, if he is the RIGHT COLOR. If he's the WRONG COLOR, you don't have to hire him.) Read 'em and weep! That's the work of a "CIVIL RIGHTS ACT" of 1964. It's about as right and civil as Jim Jones' Guyana settlement.