American Decades
Bakke, Allan 1940-
MEDICAL STUDENT AND LITIGANT
From Engineer to Doctor.
Allan Bakke was a symbol of the white backlash to civil rights and affirmative action programs. Son of a Minneapolis mailman and a teacher, Bakke originally was graduated from the University of Minnesota with a degree in engineering. To complete his obligations to NROTC, Bakke served four years in the marines, including a tour in Vietnam. He later maintained his experience in the war caused his interests to turn from engineering to medicine, but upon his return to America, he received a master's degree from Stanford, and became an engineer at the NASA Ames Research Center, south of San Francisco. At Ames, Bakke designed experimental equipment to test the effects of weightlessness and radiation on animals. The work furthered his interests in medicine, and working full-time, he enrolled in a full schedule of premed courses, and volunteered at a local hospital. In 1972 he...
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1970's Law and Justice
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Abortion: Roe v. Wade
- The Attica Riot and the Rights of Prisoners
- The Changing Legal Profession
- Crime and Public Opinion
- The Death Penalty
- The Due-Process Revolution
- Employment Opportunity: Job Requirements and Discrimination
- Environmental Law
- The Equal Rights Amendment
- Equality Before the Law: Men and Women
- Legal Services
- The Other Side of Law and Order: Nixon and the Constraints of Law
- The Supreme Court and Public Policy: The Supreme Court of the 1970s
- Paddling in Schools
- The Rights of the Accused
- School Desegregation
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Law and Justice, 1970–1979
