Taylor Jade And Skye

Taylor Jade And Skye




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Taylor Jade And Skye



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Out of concern for the health and safety of the public and Supreme Court employees, the Supreme Court Building will be closed to the public until further notice. The Building will remain open for official business. Please see all COVID-19 announcements
here .




The Court convenes for a session in the Courtroom at 10 a.m. The session may begin with the announcement of opinions - decisions
in argued cases - followed by the swearing in of new members to the Bar of the Supreme Court. Unless otherwise noted, the Court generally
hears two, one-hour oral arguments, with attorneys for each side of a case given 30 minutes to make a presentation to the Court and answer
questions posed by the Justices. These sessions are open to the public.




The Court convenes for a session in the Courtroom at 10 a.m. The session begins with the announcement of opinions - decisions in argued
cases - followed by the swearing in of new members to the Bar of the Supreme Court. These sessions, which typically last 15-30 minutes, are
open to the public.




The Justices meet in a private conference to discuss cases argued earlier that week. The Justices also discuss and vote on petitions for
review. The building is open to the public but the Justices do not take the Bench.




The Court convenes for a session in the Courtroom at 10 a.m. The session begins with the announcement of opinions - decisions in argued
cases - followed by the swearing in of new members to the Bar of the Supreme Court. These sessions, which typically last 15-30 minutes, are
open to the public.
The Justices meet in a private conference to discuss cases argued earlier that week. The Justices also discuss and vote on petitions for
review. The building is open to the public but the Justices do not take the Bench.




The Court is closed on federal holidays. For questions on how the holiday impacts case filings, contact the Clerk's Office.



 

 
 
 
 



Congress’ enactment of a significant fee increase that exempted debtors in two States violated the uniformity requirement of the Bankruptcy Clause.


 

 
 
 
 


Southwest Airlines Co. v. Saxon (21-309)





Airplane cargo loaders and ramp supervisors who, like petitioner Saxon, frequently load and unload airplane cargo belong to a “class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce” exempt from the Federal Arbitration Act’s coverage.


 

 
 
 
 



The Medicaid Act permits a State to seek reimbursement from settlement payments allocated for future medical care.


 

 
 
 
 



Federal courts may not adopt an arbitration-specific rule conditioning a waiver of the right to arbitrate on a showing of prejudice.


 

 
 
 
 


Shinn v. Martinez Ramirez (20-1009)





Under 28 U. S. C. §2254(e)(2), a federal habeas court may not conduct an evidentiary hearing or otherwise consider evidence beyond the state-court record based on the ineffective assistance of state postconviction counsel.


Supreme Court Page Charles Elmore Cropley in the Marshal’s Office, March 1908. The principal duties of a page included setting up the Justices’ desks prior to Court sessions and sitting behind the Bench to assist the Justices during Court. In addition to their work, the pages attended the Capitol Page School. Established in 1865, the Court’s Page Program lasted over 100 years and ended in 1976.

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Clerk Cropley poses with a ledger in the Clerk’s Office in the U.S. Capitol Building, 1930. At age 32, he became the youngest Clerk of the Court when he succeeded William Stansbury.
Photograph by Underwood & Underwood, Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States
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“Ex Pages and Pages who moved to the New Supreme Court Building,” 1935. From left to right: Pennell C. Kirkbride, Assistant Marshal Thomas Waggaman, Jack Stewart, Marshal Frank K. Green, Clerk Cropley, John R. Emory, Deputy Clerk Reginald Dilli, and Streit Cunningham.
Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States
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Press photograph of Clerk Cropley (second from right) receiving gifts to commemorate his 40th year of service to the Supreme Court, 1948. From left to right: Justice Robert H. Jackson, Supreme Court Librarian Helen Newman, Clerk Cropley, and Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson.

Photograph by Acme Newspictures, Inc., Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States
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SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES

1 First Street, NE

Washington, DC 20543

Charles Elmore Cropley was born on July 28, 1894, in Washington, D.C. At the age of 13, Cropley began his career at the Supreme Court, serving as a Supreme Court Page. His long and distinguished service spanned 44 years and was capped by his appointment as Clerk of the Court on June 6, 1927, a position he held for a quarter of a century.
In recognizing the passing of Clerk Cropley, Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson said, “Charles Elmore Cropley loved and revered the Court. He brought to his office a degree of thoroughness and courteous dignity seldom found today. These qualities won for him the respect and friendship of the Court, its staff, and of lawyers and litigants throughout the Nation.”

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Identical twins, Miranda and July Edith, knew they were sexually attracted to each other from a young age, but didn’t know how to honestly deal with those feelings.
“My sister and I both had feelings for each other since we were probably twelve or thirteen, right after we got our pubes,” Miranda said. “But we couldn’t express them verbally or in a direct sexual way, so we’d do silly stuff like wear each other’s dirty underwear or, you know, suck each others toes and fingers or give each other butt hickeys.”
But July finally broke the sexual tension when Miranda asked her what she wanted for their shared sixteenth birthday. July said, ‘I want you.’ Miranda said, ‘I want you more.’
“That night I climbed down from the top bunk and slid in with Miranda,” July said. “And let me tell you, we were a couple of busy beavers. I just ate her up. But things went bad…”
Their father walked in, flipped on the lights, and saw his entangled teenage daughters and, in a fit of rage, marched them out of the house.
“Daddy was very mad,” Miranda said. “That night we slept outside under the trampoline only having each other to stay warm. I thought my nipples would freeze off.”
The next day their calmed father let them back into the home, but warned that he never wanted to see them “being lesbian with each other again.” The girls decided to call off their affair, but it wasn’t to last.
“We were in love and not being able to pleasure one another was just impossible,” July said. “I mean you’re seeing your hot naked sister every day. How can you stop from getting horny? So we talked to Daddy and told him our love was real and natural. And he yelled and he called us sick and said we would go to hell. But when we started making out in front of him that didn’t seem to upset him. So we began touching each other’s breasts and crotches and that didn’t seem bother him either. Eventually we took off our bikinis and just had sex in front of him.”
After watching, their father, who had raised the girls as a single parent (their mother died during childbirth), said he could tell that this was more than a passing fade. He could see they were really in love and permitted them to continue their sexual relationship so long as they didn’t tell anybody else.
“Daddy said incest was wrong, but that was only to stop inbreeding and since we’re both girls and couldn’t make a baby together, he didn’t feel it was real incest,” July said. “After that, we could kiss and do it in front of our father and it was no big deal to him. He loves us unconditionally.”
But when the girls turned eighteen, they could no longer keep their promise of secrecy to their father. They found jobs, moved into an apartment and became openly gay. They hope by coming out they’ll inspire other gay sisters do the same. They feel people, no matter their sexual orientation, need to be proud of who they are and not hide their sexuality behind a veil of shame.
“Daddy doesn’t like that we’re telling everybody,” Miranda said. “He’s afraid the cops are going to bust us, but so far it’s been just fine. I don’t think the cops care. And Daddy still loves us so we’re happy.”

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

^ Biography Archived 2015-06-10 at the Wayback Machine , Official Website. Accessed on November 4, 2012

^ "Skye Townsend releases debut EP "Vomit" & Video "Normal" " . Vibe Vixen . May 7, 2012 . Retrieved November 4, 2012 .

^ "New EP: Skye Townsend, "Rocking Chairs" " . Eb the Celeb . April 18, 2015 . Retrieved April 18, 2015 .

^ "Skye Townsend stars on BET series, "8 Days a Week" " . BET . Retrieved November 4, 2012 .

^ "Playin' for Love" . Retrieved May 1, 2021 .

^ "[VIDEO] 'Lucifer' Season 3 Episode 17 — "I Will Survive" Sing-Off" . 2018-03-12 . Retrieved March 13, 2018 .

^ "Chase" .

^ "A Black Lady Sketch Show" . Retrieved May 1, 2021 .

^ Victoria Uwumarogie (September 28, 2011). "Get to Know Skye Townsend (Robert's Daughter) and Her Show, "8 Days a Week" " . Madame Noire .

^ Rocking Chairs on iTunes


Skylar Christan " Skye " Townsend (born September 1, 1993) is an American actress and singer. She has released two EPs, Vomit (2012) and Rocking Chairs (2015). Townsend joined the main cast of A Black Lady Sketch Show in 2021. [1]

Townsend released her debut EP album Vomit online via Digital Download on May 5, 2012. [2] The EP featured collaborations from artist like Karina Pasian & Chris O'Bannon" on ("Go Fish!"), "Micky Munday" on ("Hazel") and Wyann Vaughn on ("Free") inspired by Deniece Williams 's 1976 hit " Free ". The majority of Vomit was produced by Jonathan "JMBeatz" Malone, Waren Vaughn, Vybe, Rey Reel and more. Later on, videos were directed by her father Robert Townsend , for "Go Fish" and "It's Normal" during the month of June 2012.

In mid to late 2014, Townsend began constructing her second studio EP album, titled Rocking Chairs . [3] The project included 5 tracks along with a feature from rapper, "DEVEY2G" on a song, titled "Always".

Townsend made her acting debut on BET web series 8 Days a Week , [4] portraying the character "Jade Taylor". The show ended after 10 episodes. Skye completed a film titled Playin' for Love in 2013, playing the character Maya Hardaway the lead cheerleader. [5] She guest starred in the popular TV series Lucifer as Axara. [6] She has also been cast as Lola in the feature film Chase , shot in summer 2018. [7] As of 2021, Townsend is starring in A Black Lady Sketch Show . [8] She also appeared in on an episo
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