A judge in Albany ruled that the state no longer has the power to effectively force yeshivas to close for not teaching secular studies in a way that is “substantially equivalent” to education in public school.
The judge ruled that the state no longer has the power to force yeshivas to close for not teaching secular studies in a way that is “substantially equivalent” to education in public schools.
After bombshell decision that while yeshivas can't be shut for failing to teach core curriculum, the standards remain in place, a new mechanism for enforcement is required
Erdan called asymmetry in The Times' coverage of Israel "libelous narratives" and demanded that reporting in the paper that serves the largest urban Jewish community in the world be rectified