In Sunday's edition of The New York Times: Tomorrow's newspaper will contain articles headlined "
Secular Laws Cede to Religious Exemptions" and "
In New York Immigration Court, Asylum Roulette."
"During her visit Oct. 7-9, Justice O’Connor will address two academic conferences hosted by the College, attend an undergraduate class, and participate in a special question-and-answer session with students." So reports a press release that entitled "
Chancellor Sandra Day O'Connor to highlight several events during campus visit" that The College of William & Mary issued recently.
And earlier this week, UVA Today issued a news release entitled "Sandra Day O'Connor Expounds on Jefferson's Relevance, Then and Now, for Campaign Crowd."
"What Would Lincoln Do? A test for the Roberts Court." Richard W. Garnett and Michael Stokes Paulsen will have
this essay in the October 16, 2006 issue of The Weekly Standard.
"At Guantanamo: Hard Time and a View of What Could Have Been; Detainees at a new camp will see only a sliver of a common area; isolation has become the norm." This article appears today in The Los Angeles Times.
"Of Elections, Judges and Stupidity": Andrew Cohen has
this essay today at washingtonpost.com.
"Parent Gains Right to Dispute School Ban of Religious Music": The New York Times contains
this article today.
And The Newark (N.J.) Star-Ledger reports today that "Suit reinstated on religious song ban."
You can access Thursday's non-precedential ruling of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit at this link.
"Harvard Law Decides to Steep Students in 21st-Century Issues": This article appears today in The New York Times.
"Diner: Public has me all wrong; Some people have made him the butt of jokes or decided that he is rude, arrogant and egotistical." The St. Petersburg Times today contains
an article that begins, "Ralph Paul feels misunderstood. The New Port Richey man who went to trial over the number of shrimp and scallops in his seafood dish believes his case is not funny or amusing. He has turned down requests from radio and television comedy shows across the country trying to book him as a guest."
The newspaper has also posted online this statement from the restaurant.
"Army-financed doctor granted objector status": The Boston Globe today contains
an article that begins, "An anesthesiologist whose medical training was financed by the Army must be discharged from the Army Reserve as a conscientious objector, a federal judge ruled yesterday."
And The Associated Press provides a report headlined "Judge: Doctor a Conscientious Objector."
"O'Connor to Sit on Appeals Panel": The Associated Press provides
this report.
And The New York Daily News reports today that "O'Connor on bench a Supreme honor."
My earlier coverage appears at this link.
As these articles note, Dennis Jacobs is now Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
"Pass the Buck: When Congress passes unconstitutional laws." Dahlia Lithwick and Law Professor
Richard Schragger have
this jurisprudence essay online at Slate.
Available online from law.com: An article reports that "
Appeals Court Finds Prosecutor's Fiction Too Close to Facts of Case." My earlier coverage is
at this link.
And the new installment of my "On Appeal" column is headlined "Text This: Words Alone Can Violate Federal Obscenity Laws."
"The Kennedy Court? One man with caprice makes a majority." This editorial (free access) appears today in The Wall Street Journal.