Search for: "Bible v. State" Results 701 - 720 of 959
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4 Jul 2011, 4:00 am by Howard Friedman
, 19 Michigan State Journal of International Law 251-277 (2011). [read post]
30 Jun 2011, 9:30 am by Dan Ernst
After conducting public hearings of employers and state officials, a regulation was adopted that declared birth certificates the most reliable evidence, followed (in descending order of reliability) by baptismal records, Bibles regularly used to record a family’s vital statistics, and affidavits from two doctors, one of whom had to be a member of the U.S. [read post]
9 Jun 2011, 7:23 pm by Howard Friedman
In the case, the trial court rejected a challenge by a state-funded charter school to a state policy that barred its use of the Bible, the Koran and other sectarian books as primary source teaching material. [read post]
9 May 2011, 12:35 pm
But not everyone saw the effects of this new technology as benign: some saw the prophesied erosion of state power as an invitation to anarchy, or as opening the door to the very evils that the state power was being deployed to prevent. [read post]
15 Apr 2011, 9:01 pm by Michael Froomkin
There is a line of cases starting with Talley v California, then McIntyre v Ohio Elections Comm’n, and running through the more recent Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, in which the Supreme Court sets out a sweeping constitutional right to anonymous religious and political speech. [read post]
7 Apr 2011, 1:16 pm by Bexis
  Granted, it's only recognized in Louisiana, but there's no case out there stating flat out that Pennsylvania (or probably most other states) refuse to recognize it. [read post]
4 Apr 2011, 6:01 am by Chris Lund
  Until last week that is, when it granted certiorari in EEOC v. [read post]
3 Apr 2011, 2:07 pm by Howard Friedman
LEXIS 31511 (ND GA, March  25, 2011), a Georgia federal district court dismissed an inmate's complaint that jail officials took his Bible from him while he was in disciplinary isolation.In Mincy v. [read post]
20 Mar 2011, 9:31 am by Howard Friedman
Plaintiff complained that prison policy prohibits him from carrying his Bible or anything else other than his identification card on the recreation yard.In Kates v. [read post]