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  1. Morse v. Frederick, case in which the U.S. Supreme Court on June 25, 2007, ruled (5–4) that Alaskan school officials had not violated a student’s First Amendment freedom of speech rights after suspending him for displaying, at a school event, a banner that was seen as promoting illegal drug use.

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  3. Frederick V was the elector Palatine of the Rhine, king of Bohemia (as Frederick I, 1619–20), and director of the Protestant Union. Brought up a Calvinist, partly in France, Frederick succeeded his father, Frederick IV, both as elector and as director of the Protestant Union in 1610, with Christian

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  5. Frederick V entered Prague and was crowned king by the rebel Estates in October 1619, but already the Catholic net was closing around him. The axis linking Vienna with Munich, Brussels, and Madrid enjoyed widespread support: subsidies came from Rome and Genoa, while Tuscany and Poland sent troops.

  6. kids.britannica.com › kids › articleBritannica Kids

    Arlington Central School District Board of Education v. Murphy. legal case in which the U.S. Supreme Court on June 26, 2006, ruled (6–3) that parents who prevail in legal disputes with their school districts under the 1990 Individuals... Shelby County v. Holder

  7. There in 1618 the Protestant nobility refused to recognize Ferdinand II, soon to be Holy Roman emperor, as their king. Instead they chose Frederick V, the Palatine elector. This brought on a war involving the member states of the Holy Roman Empire.

  8. Morse Code, either of two systems for representing letters of the alphabet, numerals, and punctuation marks by arranging dots, dashes, and spaces. The codes, invented Samuel F.B. Morse and a conference of European nations, are transmitted as electrical pulses of varied lengths or analogous mechanical or visual signals.

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