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By Kurt Mueller
Aug. 26, 2003
President
of Columbia University and a law professor, Lee C. Bollinger, will
deliver the inaugural Assembly Series lecture at Washington University.
Bollinger's talk, "The Foundations of the Principles of Academic
Freedom," is the first of 14 lectures to be featured this fall.
Bollinger's talk is also the School of Law's Sesquicentennial Lecture.
His lecture will take place at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, September 10
in Graham Chapel, located just north of Mallinckrodt Center (6445
Forsyth Blvd.) on the Washington University campus. Assembly Series
lectures are free and open to the public.
Bollinger is a graduate of the University of
Oregon and Columbia University Law School. He served as a law clerk
for Judge Wilfred Feinberg on the United States Court of Appeals
for the second circuit and also for Chief Justice Warren Burger
on the United States Supreme Court. His teaching career began at
the University of Michigan Law School in 1973, and he became the
dean of the school in 1987. He joined Dartmouth College as provost
and was also appointed a professor of government in 1994. In November
1996, Bollinger was named the twelfth president of the University
of Michigan. In June 2002, Bollinger became the nineteenth president
of Columbia University.
Bollinger focuses primarily on free speech and
First Amendment issues. He has published numerous articles, essays,
reviews and books. His contributions to First Amendment writings
include three highly acclaimed books - Eternally Vigilant: Free
Speech in the Modern Era (2001), Images of a Free Press (1991),
and The Tolerant Society: Freedom of Speech and Extremist Speech
in America (1986). A defendant of affirmative action in higher education,
he was the respondent in the recent Supreme Court cases, Grutter
v. Bollinger and Gratz v. Bollinger.
For more information, call (314) 935-4620 or
visit the Assembly Series web page (http://wupa.wustl.edu/assembly).
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