FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Contact: Anne D. Neal, 202-467-6787
Top Liberal Arts
Award Goes
to
WASHINGTON, DC (September 12, 2005) -- Robert P.
George, the McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence at Princeton, will receive the
inaugural Philip Merrill Award for Outstanding Contributions to Liberal Arts
Education. Professor George is the founder and director of the innovative and
widely-acclaimed James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at
The Madison Program is a campus center for promoting an understanding of the principles on which this country is based and the institutions that preserve and protect those principles. It is serving as an inspiration and national model for institutions seeking to elevate the standard of civic education.
The award will be presented at a black tie dinner on October
7 in
The national award uniquely honors individuals who have made an extraordinary contribution to the advancement of liberal arts education, core curricula, and the teaching of Western civilization and American history. It offers a tribute to those dedicated to the transmission of the great ideas and central values of Western civilization and is presented to inspire others and provide public acknowledgment of the value of their endeavor.
The Award is named in honor of Philip Merrill, a
distinguished public servant, publisher, entrepreneur, and philanthropist who
has supported and affirmed the importance of academic excellence and a common
core of learning in a free society. Mr. Merrill has served as a trustee of
“Professor George’s selection sets a high standard for the Philip Merrill Award,” said Anne D. Neal, ACTA President. “ACTA is most pleased to be presenting this unique national prize to highlight the importance and value of a strong liberal arts education.”
Nominations were
solicited in The Chronicle of Higher Education and from prominent
education leaders across the country.
The selection committee
consisted of distinguished educational and civic leaders: Martin Anderson, Keith
and Jan Hurlbut Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution; William Friday, President
Emeritus, University of North Carolina; A. Lee Fritschler,
former President, Dickinson College and Professor, School of Public Policy,
George Mason University; Elizabeth Genovese, Eleonore
Raoul Professor of the Humanities, Emory University;
Hans Mark, former Chancellor and Professor and John J. McKetta
Centennial Energy Chair in Engineering, University of Texas at Austin; Martin Peretz, publisher, New Republic; James Q. Wilson,
Medal of Freedom winner and former Harvard Professor of Government; and Gordon
Wood, Professor of History, Brown University.
Professor George holds the most distinguished position in
constitutional law in the field of political science in
ACTA is a national education nonprofit dedicated to academic freedom, academic quality, and accountability in higher education. Its members include thousands of education leaders, alumni and trustees from colleges and universities across the country. See www.goacta.org.
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