Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "School voucher" ¶ 53
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Dissenting and opinions
Dissenting and concurring opinions are fewer than during the Dickson and Lamer Courts.
Dissenting minority opinions were recorded by the National, New Zealand First, ACT New Zealand and United Future members.
Dissenting opinions were written by Chief Justice Burger, and by Justices Black and Blackmun.
Dissenting opinions were written by Justice Scalia and Justice Ginsburg both contending that the Constitution was not implicated here, raising principles of federalism.

Dissenting and Justice
Dissenting in the Williams case, Justice John Paul Stevens found that the " nuance eludes me ," suggesting that the majority had resolved the case on a distinction that makes no difference.
" Dissenting opinion of Justice Douglas in United States v. Columbia Steel Co.
In its early stages, the Court held the view that interstate commerce was wholly immune from state taxation " in any form ," " even though the same amount of tax should be laid on ( intrastate ) commerce ," This position gave way in time to a less uncompromising but formal approach, according to which, for example, the Court would invalidate a state tax levied on gross receipts from interstate commerce, or upon the " freight carried " in interstate commerce, but would allow a tax merely measured by gross receipts from interstate commerce as long as the tax was formally imposed upon franchises, or "' in lieu of all taxes upon ( the taxpayer's ) property ,'" Dissenting from this formal approach in 1927, Justice Stone remarked that it was " too mechanical, too uncertain in its application, and too remote from actualities, to be of value.
Dissenting were Chief Justice Morrison Waite and Justices Joseph Bradley and Horace Gray.
" Dissenting Justice Curtis disagreed with Taney about what " due process " meant in Dred Scott.
Dissenting, however, Justice Harold Burton ( joined by Justices William O. Douglas, Frank Murphy, and Wiley Rutledge ) argued,
Dissenting were Chief Justice Sullivan and Justice Zarella.
Dissenting in Canadian Egg Marketing Agency v. Richardson, Justice Beverley McLachlin wrote that section 6 is not only meant to protect individual rights but also to " promote economic union among the provinces ," and in this way was related to section 121 of the Constitution Act, 1867.

Dissenting and who
Dissenters were Protestants who refused to follow the rules of the Church of England after the Restoration of Charles II in 1660, and when Newton settled in Olney the village still supported two Dissenting chapels.
One was Thomas Rogers, father of the above-named Samuel Rogers, a merchant turned banker who had married into a long-established Dissenting family and lived at No. 56 the Green.
James Burgh, author of The Dignity of Human Nature and Thoughts on Education, who opened his Dissenting Academy on the green in 1750 and sent his pupils to Price's sermons.
And there were many at a distance who acknowledged their debt to Price, such as the Unitarian theologians William Ellery Channing and Theophilus Lindsey, and the formidable polymath and Dissenting clergyman, Joseph Priestley, discoverer of oxygen.
They were forced by industrial unrest to look for work in Colchester, where they were saved from starvation by a Christian, presumably Dissenting, lawyer, who employed Gronniosaw in building work.
Hill was also one of several witnesses who have stated that at the end of the assassination she saw smoke lingering near the grassy knoll picket fence corner, although she made no mention of this when discussing the grassy knoll in her Warren Commission testimony ( testimony that she has since stated was fabricated by the commission in her book " The Last Dissenting Witness ").
James Burgh, author of The Dignity of Human Nature and Thoughts on Education, who opened his Dissenting Academy on the green in 1750 and sent his pupils to the church there.
One was Thomas Rogers, father of poet and banker Samuel Rogers, a merchant turned banker who had married into a long-established Dissenting family and lived at No. 56 the Green.
James Burgh, author of The Dignity of Human Nature and Thoughts on Education, who opened his Dissenting Academy on the green in 1750 and sent his pupils to Price's sermons.

Dissenting and wrote
Dissenting, John Banville wrote a scathing review of the book for The New York Review of Books.

Dissenting and education
The young Malthus received his education at home in Bramcote, Nottinghamshire, and then at the Dissenting Warrington Academy.
There was £ 10, 000 for the library of Manchester College, founded as a Dissenting academy to provide religious nonconformists with higher education.

Dissenting and school
Having gone to school at Sleaford in Lincolnshire he passed at the age of sixteen to the Dissenting academy at Northampton, of which Dr Philip Doddridge was then president.
Gale's death in 1678 forestalled this plan ; instead, he attended another grammar school and then studied at Dissenting academies under Edward Veel ( or Veal ) in Stepney and then Charles Morton in Newington Green, where Gale had lived.

Dissenting and irrelevant
Stewart, Black, Harlan Dissenting: the test for whether a statue violates the equal protection clause is a simple one: legislation is only invalid if it rest on grounds wholly irrelevant to achievement of the regulation ’ s objectives.

Dissenting and for
In response, in 1774, Lindsey applied for registration of the Essex House as a Dissenting place of worship with the assistance of barrister Mr. John Lee.
In Britain and America " Socinianism " later became a catch-all term for any kind of Dissenting belief.
* One name for the Dissenting Academy set up by Calvinists in Homerton ( in the parish of Hackney ) in 1786, also known in various accounts as Homerton Academy, or Homerton College.
Jack ( named for John Calvin, but whom Swift also connects to " Jack of Leyden ") represents the various Dissenting Protestant churches such as Baptists, Presbyterians, Quakers, Congregationalists, or Anabaptists.
Dissenting points of view often are dismissed as " idiotarian " or " LLL " ( for " loony liberal left "), and Islam is mockingly referred to as " RoP ", meaning " religion of peace ".
After 1787, the emergence of Dissenting groups formed for the sole purpose of overturning these laws began to divide the community ; however, the repeal efforts failed in 1787, 1789, and 1790.
In ' The Dissenting Tradition: Essays for Leland H. Carlson ' ed.
Abney Park Cemetery was the first to be laid out with ' no invidious dividing lines ' separating the burial areas of one faith or religious group from any other, and even its one chapel, the Abney Park Chapel, a feast of Puritan or northern European brick gothic yet with ample stone dressings and a little neoclassical design woven into its early Dissenting Gothic design style, had but one central chamber for the common use of all, and but one entrance.
Dissenting members believed that the resolution was singling out Cuba for condemnation, and instead should have issued a call which urged both states to refrain from shooting down civilian airplanes as well as to prevent the improper use of civil aviation.

Dissenting and religious
With independent religious leanings, Philip Doddridge declined offers which would have led him into the Anglican ministry or a career in law ; and in 1719 chose instead to enter the Dissenting academy at Kibworth in Leicestershire.

Dissenting and is
The birth date is unknown likely due to the fact he was baptized in a Dissenting church, which either did not keep or was unable to preserve its baptismal records ; accord Royal Society Library and Archive catalog, Thomas Bayes ( 1701 – 1761 )</ li >
Dissenting pairs can present alternate views of what is wrong with the decision under consideration.
London has several of these: Newington Green, originally a Dissenting village, is one good example, with its church anchoring its north end.
It is possible he was educated at a Dissenting academy.
Watts, unable to go to either Oxford or Cambridge on account of his non-conformity, went to the Dissenting Academy at Stoke Newington in 1690, and much of his life centred around that village, which is now part of Inner London.
Dissenting ministers also historically wore these and, though now rare, it is re-emerging in some Presbyterian and Baptist circles.
* The rapper Jesse Dangerously on his album How to Express Your Dissenting Political Viewpoint Through Origami, where the song is titled " Tom Lehrer's The Elements ".
Dissenting votes are rare and the customary declaration at the end of the voting is " the voting appears to be unanimous in the affirmative.
In Halifax, St. Matthew's dates back to 1749 as a " Dissenting Protestant Worship House ", and adhered to Presbyterian polity at a later date ; the Presbyterian Church of St. David is another 1925 " Minority Group " from within downtown Halifax congregations including St Matthew's, and celebrated its 80th Anniversary in 2005, meeting in the former Grafton Street Methodist ( 1869 ) building, acquired in their early days.
This is how he got the nickname Dissenting Dawson.

0.365 seconds.