"U. S. Supreme Court: Six Decisions That Changed America" Paperback by Robert A. Frick
Dublin Core
Identifier
2024.8.a
Title
"U. S. Supreme Court: Six Decisions That Changed America" Paperback by Robert A. Frick
Subject
Local Government and Politics
References
Book
References
Book
Description
Description from Amazon: "The United States Supreme Court interprets the laws–their rulings standing until the Constitution is amended or reinterpreted by a later Court. The author tells the story of six cases considered by many to be among the Court’s most significant ones. These descriptions are simple stories about complex cases brought before the Court.From Marbury v. Madison (1803) to United States v. Nixon (1974), readers learn that the United States Supreme Court has the authority to rule a law unconstitutional; segregation, in itself, was not originally considered to constitute unlawful discrimination; segregation in public education based solely on race violates the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment; prayer and Bible reading as part of the public school day violate the religious freedom of students as provided by the First and Fourteenth Amendments; and a President may not withhold information by using executive privilege as a means to avoid judicial review."
Date
October 2018
Creator
Robert A. Frick
Publisher
CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
Books, Reference Publications and Documents Item Type Metadata
Original Format
Paperback Book
MJAHS Location
Case #26
Collection
Contributor
Robert A. Frick
Citation
Robert A. Frick, “"U. S. Supreme Court: Six Decisions That Changed America" Paperback by Robert A. Frick,” MJAHS Online Inventory, accessed October 16, 2025, https://www.mountjoyhistory.com/inventory/items/show/12405.