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Al Gore
Al Gore joined
the faculty of Middle Tennessee State University in January 2001
to teach the interdisciplinary course "Community Building:
A Comprehensive Family CenteredApproach." He holds similar
teaching appointments at Columbia University, New York, and Fisk
University, Nashville. At MTSU, he is a visiting professor under the auspices of the John Seigenthaler
Chair of Excellence in First Amendment Studies.
The son of Pauline
LaFon Gore and the late U.S. Senator Albert Gore, Sr., a 1932 graduate
of MTSU, the younger Gore was raised in Carthage, Tennessee, and
Washington, D.C. He received a degree in government with honors
from Harvard University in 1969. After graduation, he volunteered
to enlist in the U.S. Army and served in Vietnam. Returning to civilian
life, Gore became an investigative reporter with The Tennessean
in Nashville. He attended Vanderbilt University Divinity School
and Vanderbilt Law School.
Al Gore began
his career in public service in 1976 when he was elected to represent
Tennessee in the U.S. House of Representatives (1977-1985). He was
elected to the U.S. Senate in 1984 and was re-elected in 1990 (1985-1993).
A candidate for the Democratic nomination for President in 1988,
he won more than three million votes and Democratic contests in
seven states. He was inaugurated as the 45th Vice President of the
United States on January 20, 1993, and served two terms. Gore was
the Democratic Presidential candidate in 2000, garnering 51 million
votes.
The Gore Research
Center on the Middle Tennessee State University campus, houses the
official papers of Gore's late father as well as those of a number
of other individuals.
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