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[...] in its recent decision in Morse v. Frederick,*1 the Court muddled the map with an ad hoc content-based approach.13 Arguably, the threshold limitations of student speech beyond the traditional and largely inapplicable doctrines of "fighting words" and "obscenity"- specifically, the prerequisite of particularized messages14 and the noncoverage of true threats15- are both constitutionally appropriate and practically sufficient in terms of limiting the scope of First Amendment protection.16 Thus, within the zone of well-recognized First Amendment coverage, the substantial disruption and school sponsorship standards provide an ample and robust model for the special circumstances of public school students.17 This model serves as an alternative to the ad hoc contentbased patchwork that t...
Joe Musante was a day removed from giving two pitching lessons, something he had done hundreds of times before. He felt just fine. Musante was two days removed from giving the introduction speech for Jo-Lynn Cimino, his former star pupil and the ex-standout for both the University of New Haven and Guilford High, into the Connecticut Scholastic and Collegiate Softball Hall of Fame, at the Aqua Turf Club in Southington.
§ 29.1 Observations About First Amendment Doctrine Prior to the Modern Era. § 29.1.1 The Original Natural Law Era. § 29.1.2 The Formalist Era. § 29.1.3 The Holmesian Era. § 29.1.4 The Instrumentalist Era. § 29.2 Introduction to the Structure of Free Speech Doctrine in the Modern Era. § 29.3 Government Regulations of Speech versus Regulations of Conduct or pending on Speech to Which Standard First Amendment Doctrine Does Not Apply. § 29.3.1 Governmental Regulations of Speech versus Regulations of Conduct. § 29.3.2 Governmental Regulations of Speech versus Spending on Speech. § 29.4 Content-Based versus Content-Neutral Regulations of Speech in Public Forums or on Private Property. § 29.4.1 The Content-Based versus Content-Neutral Dist...
Introduction. I. The History of First Amendment Litigation Regarding Constitutionally Protected Speech in Public Schools. A. School Administrators and Officials are Increasingly Required to Meet an Insurmountable Burden to Repress Students' First Amendment Speech in the Face of Potential Dangers and Disruptions to the Scholastic Environment. II. The Frequency of Violent Public School Episodes Is Increasing at an Alarming Rate. A. Today's Public School Students Are Increasingly Insubordinate, Disrespectful and Violent Towards Both Other Students and the Faculty. III. School Officials Should Only Have to Demonstrate a Reasonable Likelihood of Material Disruption.
DAMASCUS, Syria - Syria's president dashed expectations that he would announce sweeping reforms Wednesday and instead took a tough line, blaming two weeks of popular fury on a foreign conspiracy. Bashar Assad's own officials billed his speech as an introduction of major change and the turnaround infuriated protesters who vowed to keep up with their extraordinary cries for reform.
The State Department on Sunday derided Syrian President Bashar Assad's latest initiative to end the 21 months of violence as "detached from reality. Although Assad's speech was billed as the introduction of a new peace plan, he offered no concessions and even appeared to harden many of his positions, Reuters reported. He rallied Syrians for "a war to defend the nation" and disparaged the prospect of negotiations.
Joe Musante was a day removed from giving two pitching lessons, something he had done hundreds of times before. He felt just fine. Musante was two days removed from giving the introduction speech for Jo-Lynn Cimino, his former star pupil and the ex-standout for both the University of New Haven and Guilford High, into the Connecticut Scholastic and Collegiate Softball Hall of Fame, at the Aqua Turf Club in Southington.
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