Category Archives: speakers and panels

Supreme Court Debate in the Paper

An article regarding our “What’s at Stake on Nov. 4th” event appeared in the Columbia Missourian and provides a good summary of the ground covered during the debate.  It also featured comments from the presidents of both this chapter and the local Federalist Society chapter.

Jonathan Hutcheson, president of the American Constitution Society at MU, said the debate was held in part because of the upcoming election but also for the sake of intellectual curiosity.

“It’s always healthy to discuss these issues openly in a way that’s structured and well informed,” Hutcheson said. “Instead of just getting snapshots here and there on these issues, it’s a little bit more of a focused discourse on the subject matter.”

Carolyn Hamilton, president of The Federalist Society at MU, said the goal was to represent different views and foster discussion.  

“Something that both of our groups strive to do is just open up everything for discussion,” she said. “Neither of us are political organizations. We just like to open up current topics.”

For more on this event, feel free to follow the link below to read the article online. 

Speakers discuss impact of presidential election on Supreme Court (Missourian)

What’s at Stake on Nov. 4th? The Future of the Supreme Court

The American Constitution Society and the Federalist Society present “What’s at Stake on Nov. 4th? The Future of the Supreme Court” - a discussion about the impact of the upcoming national election on the United States Supreme Court.

For more background on our two distinguished speakers, please visit the following links:

For David C. Frederick, see http://www.utexas.edu/law/faculty/profile.php?id=dcf232
http://www.khhte.com/attorneys_view.php?id=88

For Stephen McAllister, see http://www.law.ku.edu/faculty/faculty/mcallister.shtml

Supreme Court Series: Administrative, Regulatory, & Antitrust Law

The Supreme Court Series wraps up on the first day of the 2008 fall term - October 6th - at 1pm in the Courtroom with a discussion regarding developments in the areas of administrative, regulatory, and antitrust law.  Featuring Profs. Philip Harter and Thom Lambert.