Search Results
Case name | Citation | Summary |
Shuttlesworth v. Birmingham | 1969 | overbreadth of local ordinance used by city officials to ban civil rights march |
Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District | 1969 | freedom of speech in public schools |
Epperson v. Arkansas | 1968 | religiously motivated state law prohibiting the teaching of evolution in publicly funded schools |
Jones v. Mayer | 1968 | housing discrimination |
Mancusi v. DeForte | 1968 | Court: United States Court of Appeals Fourth Amendment allows reasonable expectation of privacy to exist at workplace |
King v. Smith | 1968 | Aid to Families with Dependent Children cannot be denied to families of qualifying children based on a substitute father |
United States v. Southwestern Cable Co. | 1968 | Administrative law |
Flast v. Cohen | 1968 | taxpayer standing |
Terry v. Ohio | 1968 | search and seizure, power of police to stop and frisk suspicious persons |
Pickering v. Board of Education | 1968 | public employees' free speech rights |
Witherspoon v. Illinois | 1968 | constitutional status of a death-qualified jury |
Green v. County School Board of New Kent County | 1968 | "freedom-of-choice" desegregation plan held unconstitutional |
Menominee Tribe v. United States | 1968 | Tribal hunting and fishing rights, treaty interpretation |
United States v. O'Brien | 1968 | free speech, burning draft cards |
Duncan v. Louisiana | 1968 | selective incorporation, trial by jury |
Levy v. Louisiana | 1968 | An illegitimate child may still sue on behalf of a deceased parent; to deny them this right violates the Fourteenth Amendment |
Ginsberg v. New York | 1968 | States can prohibit sale of obscene material to minors |
Avery v. Midland County | 1968 | local government districts must conform to "one man, one vote" |
Albrecht v. Herald Co. | 1968 | minimum price agreements between wholesalers and franchisees unlawful under the Sherman Act |
Provident Tradesmens Bank & Trust Co. v. Patterson | 1968 | Court: United States Court of Appeals indispensable parties under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure |