New College Welcomes
Best-Selling Author and Historian James F. Simon on Feb. 4
Author of What Kind of
Nation and new book Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney
to give free public talk as part of President's Month Series
(January 22, 2008) -- New College of Florida is pleased
to welcome noted historian and author James F. Simon to
campus for a free public talk on Monday, February 4 at 4:30
p.m. in College Hall. The talk is part of New College's
second annual President's Month Speaker series, featuring
talks and discussions by some of the nation's leading
scholars and historians on
the lives of U.S. presidents George Washington and Abraham
Lincoln.
Simon, who is Dean Emeritus at New York Law School and a
former contributing editor for Time magazine, is the
author of the best-seller What Kind of Nation: Thomas
Jefferson, John Marshall, and the Epic Struggle to Create a
United States (Simon and Schuster, 2002). That book was
hailed by Arthur Schlesinger Jr. as "exciting and notable"
and by Lincoln scholar Harold Holzer as "a riveting,
accessible, and ingenious study." Pulitzer Prize-winning
author Joseph J. Ellis called What Kind of Nation "a major
contribution" to American thought in his review of the book
for the New York Times Book Review in March 2002.
The subject for Simon's talk at New College will be his
latest book, Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney: Slavery,
Secession, and the President's War Powers, also
published by Simon and Schuster. Released in 2007,
Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney draws from Simon's
in-depth exploration of Supreme Court cases while serving as
a contributing editor and specialist in legal affairs for
Time magazine. The book has received widespread praise
for its discussion and analysis of the use of a presidential
powers during war time.
"It is a privilege for New College to host one of the
country's most knowledgeable and best-recognized historians
for this special talk," said New College President Mike
Michalson in announcing Simon's visit. "Dr. Simon's
discussion could not be more timely given current debate
over the appropriate use of presidential powers during times
of war and other national crises."
A faculty member at New York Law School since 1975, Simon
served as dean of the law school from 1983-1992. He also has
served on the Board of Trustees at New York Law School and
Hobart and William Smith Colleges. His numerous academic
awards and honors include a Ford Foundation Africa-Asia
Fellowship to work and study in India; a year as a Harvard
Fellow in Law and the Humanities; and an honorary Doctor of
Laws degree from New York Law School in 1992. He has
received a New York Times’s “Notable Book” mention, a
Certificate of Merit and the 1974 Silver Gavel Award from
the American Bar Association, and the 1981 Scribes Book
Award from the American Society of Writers on Legal
Subjects.
For more information, please contact the New College of
Florida Office of Public Affairs at (941) 487-4155 or email
publicaffairs@ncf.edu.
A live simulcast of Simon's talk also will be available on
the day of the event. To view the simulcast, go to the New
College web site
www.ncf.edu and
follow the link at the top of the page.
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