ture
True. The US Supreme Court has allowed the use of public school facilities for voluntary student created religious groups that are open to all students, as long as the schools do not discriminate based on the content or viewpoint of the student's speech. This was established in the landmark case of Board of Education v. Mergens in 1990.
the religious classes were held in public facilities
its hard
supreme personality of godhead
At issue here was an Alabama law requiring that each school day begin with a one minute period of "silent meditation or voluntary prayer" (the original 1978 law read only "silent meditation," but the words "or voluntary prayer" were added in 1981). A student's parent sued alleging that this law violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment because it forced students to pray and basically exposed them to religious indoctrination. The District Court permitted the prayers to continue, but the Court of Appeals ruled that they were unconstitutional, so the state appealed to the Supreme Court.
The social system that provided separate facilities for the minorities was called 'separate, but equal.' The Supreme Court eventually found that they were not equal.
I guess that would depend on what supreme court you are talking about - i.e., in what country.
LEADERSHIP is an influence.No more no less.
true
A person who is non-religious is someone who does not adhere to any particular religious beliefs or practices. They may identify as atheist, agnostic, or simply as someone who does not follow or subscribe to any religious traditions.
SSG stands for SUPREME STUDENTS GOVERNMENT...they are students officers who are the link of the students to the faculty/teachers. They will be the one who will defence the students againts teachers but they must see to it that the student also following the rules and regulations of the school.
The Supreme Court decided that the state governments could legally separate people of different races as long as the separate facilities were equal.
Students had freedom of speech at school