| Tennessee Bar Association - Bar associations - 1927 - 536 pages
...engaged in the justifiable purpose of protecting the health of the child, the language employed being: "We are constrained to conclude that the statute as applied is arbitrary, and without any reasonable relation to any end within the competency of the state." GRAIN FUTURES. In consonance... | |
| Rodney Loomer Mott - Constitutional law - 1926 - 796 pages
...(1923) 522, 67 L. ed. 110.?. 58 For this reason the foreign language statutes were declared void. "Xo emergency has arisen which renders knowledge by a...clearly harmful as to justify its inhibition with tinconsequent infringement of rights long freely enjoyed. We are constrained to conclude that the statute... | |
| Charles Ellewyin George - Banking law - 1927 - 444 pages
...schools was not constitutional, it was aimed at the German language, and the Court said, at page 628 : "No emergency has arisen which renders knowledge by a child of some language other than the English so clearly harmful as to justify the inhibition with the consequent infringement of rights... | |
| Texas Bar Association - Bar associations - 1927 - 260 pages
...McReynolds seems to have thought that the rule of patience had been observed long enough, for he said: "We are constrained to conclude that the statute as applied is arbitrary, and without any reasonable relation to any end within the competency of the state," and he further held that the... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Labor and Public Welfare - 1970 - 1258 pages
...ordinarily useful la not enough to justify Its abolition, although regulation may be entirely proper. No emergency has arisen- which renders knowledge by -a child of some Ian guage other than English so clearly harm ~ful as to justify Its Inhibition with the consequent... | |
| Clifford P. Hooker - Education - 1978 - 416 pages
...language instruction in Nebraska elementary schools.86 "No emergency has arisen," the Court asserted, "which renders knowledge by a child of some language...the consequent infringement of rights long freely enjoyed."57 Among the rights long freely enjoyed, according to the Court, was the parent's right to... | |
| Dennis E. Baron - Political Science - 1990 - 260 pages
...conflict with thè Constitution, — a desirable end cannot be promoted by prohibited means. . . . No emergency has arisen which renders knowledge by...consequent infringement of rights long freely enjoyed. Dissenting from this opinion, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes affirmed that the goal of having an English-speaking... | |
| William G. Ross - Law - 1994 - 304 pages
...decisions concerning freedom of speech, however, may have informed its decision in Meyer. In finding that "no emergency has arisen which renders knowledge by...so clearly harmful as to justify its inhibition," the Court in Meyer appears to have applied the reasoning of the "clear and present danger" test. Moreover,... | |
| |