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On February 15, 1985, Clarence M. Pendleton Jr., the Reagan administration’s chairman of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, delivered a speech to the Eagle Forum of Orange County, California. Pendleton was an unusual choice for the Reagan Administration; he had received his education from Howard University and had earned a bachelor of science degree in 1954 and a master’s degree in education in 1961. In 1972 he moved to California to work for the San Diego Model Cities Program, and three years later he was elected president of the city’s Urban League. He also began to adopt some conservative views, including opposition to affirmative action. In 1981 President Ronald Reagan appointed Pendleton the head of the Commission on Civil Rights, a position Pendleton held until 1987.