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The Act was intended "[t]o amend Section 13A-6-60, Code of Alabama 1975, so as to remove the exemption from criminal responsibility of the spouse for rape and redefine the term 'female' which excludes married victims." [122] The Governor approved the Act on April 28, 1988 at 3:32 PM, and it came into effect immediately upon passage and approval ...
Now CR 27 / Old Highway 5 SR 157: 91.061: 146.548 US 278 east of Cullman: SR 227 at the Tennessee state line 1957: current SR 158 — — US 241 (this section now SR 95) at Abbeville: CR 57 northeast of Abbeville 1948: 1949 Now Henry CR 46 SR 158 — — US 231 at Willow Springs: SR 14 at Tallassee: 1952: 1953
U.S. Route 31 (US 31) is the highway with the longest segment in Alabama, with 386.449 miles (621.929 km). The shortest is US 72 Alternate, crossing 68.3 miles (109.9 km) of North Alabama. [1] One former U.S. Highway existed in Alabama: US 241. It traveled through the eastern part of the state. US 241 was replaced by US 280 and US 431 in 1954. [2]
U.S. Route 241 (Alabama–Tennessee) in Alabama and Tennessee Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about roads and streets with the same name.
1990 Alabama Senate District 32 special election - 8 August 1989 [10] Party Candidate Votes % ±% Republican: Albert Lipscomb: 7,914 : ... Code of Conduct; Developers;
The southern terminus of SR 241 is located at its intersection with US 278 in Whitehouse. From this point, the route travels in a northerly direction to its northern terminus at its intersection with SR 237 in Shady Grove. SR 241 shares a brief concurrency with SR 172 while it travels through Allens Factory.
Georgia, Florida, & Alabama Railway Co. v. Blish Milling Co., 241 U.S. 190 (1916), was a case decided by the Supreme Court of the United States. The Blish Milling Company [ edit ]
The law was originally enacted, with slightly different phrasing, in Section 6 of the Enforcement Act of 1870. [3]: 913 The statutory text was revised in 1909 and in 1948, when it became Section 241 of Title 18 of the U.S. Code. [4]: 236 Conspiracy against rights was initially invoked against vigilante groups like the Ku Klux Klan that acted to prevent recently-emancipated Black Southerners ...