The student newspaper at Ithaca High School, The Tattler, wrote an editorial questioning whether their sex education classes needed to go into such explicit detail.
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Barnes v. Zaccari
Thomas Barnes was a student at Valdosta State University who was expelled in 2007 by the school’s president without any warning or a chance to contest the decision.
Barnes v. Zaccari
Thomas Barnes was a student at Valdosta State University who was expelled in 2007 by the school’s president without any warning or a chance to contest the decision.
B.H. & K.M. et al v. Easton Area School District
In November 2010, Jennifer Hawk and Amy McDonald Martinez filed a lawsuit against Easton School District, in Pennsylvania, in response to what they felt was the unlawful suspension of their daughters.
B.H. & K.M. et al v. Easton Area School District
In November 2010, Jennifer Hawk and Amy McDonald Martinez filed a lawsuit against Easton School District, in Pennsylvania, in response to what they felt was the unlawful suspension of their daughters.
FCC v. Fox Television Stations
In 2004 Fox was fined for the use of fleeting expletives during its broadcast of the Billboard Music Awards in 2002 and 2003.
Chicago Tribune Co. v. University of Illinois
In 2009, the Chicago Tribune was conducting an investigation into allegations that the University of Illinois had a special recruitment track for well connected families.
MRB et al v. Puyallup School District
In February 2008, after learning about a report that said more than half of teens aged 15 to 19 had engaged in oral sex, students reporters at Emerald Ridge High School decided to run a series of articles on the subject in their paper, the JagWire. One of the articles included a series of interviews with students about their experiences with oral sex.
South Carolina Association of School Administrators v. Disabato
In December 2009, radio talk-show host Rocky Disabato requested records from the South Carolina Association of School Administrators about federal stimulus funding.
Ward v. Polite
Julea Ward was a graduate student at Eastern Michigan University enrolled in the school counseling program who refused to counsel a student on homosexuality based on her religious views. The court held that a school cannot use the excuse of enforcing a curriculum to discriminate against a student's religious views.