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Play A Game Show And Learn History At The Same Time
Professor PC Teaches A New Political Game Show
PROFESSOR PC'S CLASSROOM, Updated 3:04 p.m. EDT September 2, 2000 --
Copyright 2000 by News4Jax.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Take a game show formula combine it with the 55 Founding Fathers who attended the 1787 constitutional convention and you have a game-slash-political science show that should be a huge ratings success in this election year. Call it, "Who Wants to Marry a Founding Father?" For instance, if you choose a Northern marital candidate and don't mind escorting a peg-legged man then the Founding Father for you would be Gouverneur Morris of Pennsylvania. He spoke more than any other at the convention, 173 times and, as it turns out, was the guy who actually drafted the constitution. That alone, should get the wife of this guy into any of those snooty inaugural balls.
"Who Wants to Marry a Founding Father" is part of the University of Missouri At Kansas City's Law School web site. It's in the Constitutional Conflicts section which is a treasure trove of, not only eligible bachelors of the country-forming-variety, but of discussions of constitutional questions effecting us all. It's great for the kids in this election year, and just to be fair, you can also select "Who Wants to Marry a Founding Mother." There weren't any women at the convention but what the heck I picked Abigail Adams. That hat really does it for me. Class dismissed.
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