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Editor's note: For more information,
please visit the Constitution
Day feature.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The University of Alabama will commemorate
the nation’s first Constitution Day with a forum on two topics
of intense national interest – the use of marijuana for medical
purposes and a recent Supreme Court decision allowing seizure of
private property in Connecticut.
The forum, “Today’s Constitutional Dilemmas: Medical
Marijuana and Seizure of Property,” will be held Sept. 16
at 2 p.m. in room 151 of Shelby Hall on the UA campus. The forum
is being sponsored by UA’s College of Arts and Sciences.
It is free and open to the public.
The event will be led by a panel of UA faculty experts in the
topic areas: Dr. Vijaya Sundar, chair of the department of internal
medicine at the University of Alabama School of Medicine, Tuscaloosa,
and associate professor in UA’s College of Community Health
Sciences; Professor Bryan Fair, University of Alabama School of
Law; Dr. Joseph L. Smith, assistant professor, department of political
science; Dr. James Otteson, professor of philosophy and chair of
the department of philosophy; and Dr. Norvin Richards, professor
of philosophy.
“Constitution Day is intended to foster a greater understanding
of the ideas and principals on which America was founded and a
deeper appreciation of our country’s founding document, the
oldest written constitution in the world,” said Dr. Robert
Olin, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.
“The topics we have selected to examine for Constitution
Day are the subjects of intense debate on university campuses,
in our law schools and courts, and in our communities,” Olin
said. “We hope this forum will provide our community members
with valuable information they can use in safeguarding and exercising
their civil liberties.”
Marijuana has long been used illegally to alleviate symptoms of
severe illnesses, and in recent years medical patients have fought
for the right to make the drug available by prescription.
The Supreme Court recently ruled that California does not have
the right to allow its citizens to use doctor-prescribed marijuana
for medical purposes. U. S. Court of Appeals Judge William Pryor
of the 11th Circuit, a former Alabama attorney general, filed a
brief supporting California’s right to allow medical use
of marijuana. The panel will shed light on why the Court threw
out California’s medical marijuana law, and why Pryor believes
California has the right to allow the use of marijuana.
The Supreme Court’s recent decision allowing a Connecticut
town to force several residents to sell their homes to make way
for economic development projects has triggered outrage among advocates
of strong property rights. The UA panel will outline why the Supreme
Court allowed the seizure of home and the implications of the court’s
decision on property ownership.
Constitution Day was established by Congress to be held each year
on Sept. 17, the day on which delegates to the Philadelphia Convention
completed and signed the U.S. Constitution in 1787. The bill requiring
all schools and federal agencies to hold educational programs on
that day was sponsored by U.S. Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia
and signed into law by President George W. Bush on Dec. 8, 2004.
Schools, federal agencies and civic groups throughout the nation
are holding special events to honor the U.S. Constitution, led
by the National Constitution Center of Philadelphia, Pa. Sponsors
for the day include the American Bar Association, the Bill of Rights
Institute, C-SPAN television network and the Campaign for the Civic
Mission of Schools, among others.
More information on Constitution Day can be found on the web at
www.constitutionday.us.
With 6,600 students and 360 faculty members, UA’s College
of Arts and Sciences is the largest public liberal arts college
in Alabama and UA’s largest division. College students have
been selected for many of the nation’s top academic honors,
including Rhodes, Goldwater, and Truman Scholarships, and memberships
on USA Today’s Academic All-American teams.
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