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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Aug. 31, 2006) – Protecting civil liberties
during wartime will be the topic of this year’s Nolan Fowler Constitution
Day Celebration at Tennessee Tech University.
Set for 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 19, in the Derryberry Hall Auditorium,
the event’s featured speaker will be Mark A. Graber, a professor
of law at the University of Maryland, College Park, and one of the nation’s
leading scholars of constitutional law.
All educational institutions receiving federal funds are required each
year in September to host a celebration commemorating the Sept. 17, 1787,
signing of the U.S. Constitution.
Fowler, a retired history professor and longtime instructor of constitutional
law at the university, provided a $150,000 endowment to establish the
Constitution Day Celebration at TTU.
“His generous gift allows TTU to attract distinguished scholars
from across the country to campus, and our first Constitution Day Celebration
last year was a tremendous success,” said Kent Dollar, assistant
professor of history at TTU and chairperson of this year’s event
planning committee.
An estimated 900 students, faculty and community members attended last
year’s inaugural event.
In addition to speaking at this year’s celebration, Graber has
written extensively about various constitutional law topics, such as abortion,
free speech and slavery.
His books include Transforming Free Speech: The Ambiguous Legacy
of Civil Libertarianism (University of California Press), Rethinking
Abortion: Equal Choice, the Constitution and Reproductive Politics
(Princeton University Press) and Dred Scott and the Problem of Constitutional
Evil (Cambridge University Press).
Graber has also authored numerous articles about constitutional law topics,
including “Naked Land Transfers and American Constitutional Development,”
published in the Vanderbilt Law Review and “Resolving Political
Questions into Judicial Questions: Tocqueville’s Aphorism Revisited,”
published by Constitutional Commentary.
He earned a bachelor’s degree from Dartmouth College, master’s
and doctoral degrees from Yale University and a juris doctorate from Columbia
University Law School.
For more information about TTU’s Nolan Fowler Constitution Day
Celebration, call the university’s history department at 931/372-3332.
--Tracey LeFevre
This information posted 1 September 2006
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