10 Commandments law struck down in Arkansas
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Tennessee may soon see the Ten Commandments in public schools after state Senators passed a bill mandating the document be prominently displayed.
Texas, Louisiana and Arkansas have passed laws requiring the posters in public schools. Several other states are considering similar measures.
The Tennessee Senate passed a bill March 19 mandating public schools display the Ten Commandments in all classrooms.
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Ten Commandments staying up at University of Arkansas despite federal judge’s ruling
Despite a federal judge's recent ruling that the display of the Ten Commandments in public schools in the Natural State is unconstitutional, they are staying up at the University of Arkansas.
The four posters feature religious and historical motifs, as well as the Ten Commandments. One of the designs even features an image of Louisiaha House Speaker Mike Johnson.
The Ten Commandments must be displayed with the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution in a place where students can see them.
A group that advocates civil liberties threatened to take the state of Louisiana to the United States Supreme Court after its defense of the Ten Commandments law.
The University of Arkansas at Little Rock's William H. Bowen School of Law will put up displays of the Ten Commandments in the law school's classrooms and library to comply with Arkansas law, Dean Colin Crawford told Bowen students,
A federal judge struck down Arkansas’s law requiring public schools to display the Ten Commandments on the basis that it establishes a state religion. My question is: What religion, exactly, do critic