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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (July 26, 2005) — United States House of Representatives
member William L. (Bill) Jenkins will address 522 Tennessee Tech University
graduates during summer commencement at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Aug. 6, in
Hooper Eblen Center.
Jenkins, who represents Tennessee’s First District, was sworn in
to his current post on January 7, 1997. In his fifth term in Congress,
he serves on House committees on judiciary and agriculture and subcommittees
on the Constitution and courts.
Jenkins is a member of the judiciary committee’s subcommittees
on the Internet and intellectual property, as well as general farm commodities
and risk management. In 2003, he was named chairman of the agriculture
subcommittee on specialty crops and foreign agriculture programs.
A graduate of TTU and the University of Tennessee College of Law, Jenkins
began his career in political office at age 25, as a member of the Tennessee
General Assembly, serving as a state representative for his native Hawkins
County, as well as Hancock and Grainger counties. In 1969, he served as
Speaker of the House.
A former commissioner for the Tennessee Department of Conservation, he
served as a policy adviser on energy and legislative issues for former
Gov. Lamar Alexander. In 1971, he was appointed by the President to serve
as one of three members on the Tennessee Valley Authority’s board
of directors.
He served on active duty as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army Military
Police Corps and worked as a family farmer, raising beef cattle and burley
tobacco, in his hometown of Rogersville. He also worked as an attorney
prior to his appointment in 1990 as Circuit Court Judge for Tennessee’s
Third Judicial District.
Married to the former Kathryn Myers, who taught at Cherokee Comprehensive
High School in Hawkins County, the couple has four children and 11 grandchildren.
Students graduating this summer hail from 13 different states including
Tennessee, 59 Tennessee counties and five foreign countries. They represent
27 undergraduate fields of study and 18 graduate fields.
Following summer commencement, TTU will have granted nearly 57,000 degrees.
--Tracey LeFevre
This information posted 26 July 2005
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