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The sick, care for the dying, and to promote the general health. The unspoken argument in this case is that the lower GPA and MCAT scores of some of the Special Admissions Students at Davis permitted unqualified students to enter the school, students who, if they
graduated at all, would be medical dumbbels or butchers.

The facts do not support this argument.

The special students at Davis had MCAT scores that equal the National average in 1950. If today's student is unqualified, then surely so is every practicing Physician who received his education before then.

But to suggest that the special students are unqualified to become medical students is to suggest criminal behavior on the part of Admissions Committees, or to suggest that minorities are racially unable to qualify for a Medical School education in the United States.

One important point to remember -- there is little correlation

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