Three other children of parents who prayed while girl was dying are removed from Wisconsin home |
TUSD faces Pledge of Allegiance furor |
Residents of New York community object to small Christmas tree next to towering menorah |
Young Jehovah's Witness who refused blood transfusion on religious grounds dies |
|
Sound the alarm on these intruders
Opinion by Kevin R. Kemper
During the past two weeks, the Maricopa County Attorney's Office and Sheriff's Office have attempted to search some of our personal information through secret grand jury subpoenas issued to the owners and employees of the alternative newspaper Phoenix New Times. |
Colleges' quandary: extremist speaker |
Profane Language Puts Student Editor's Job On Line
Editorial Raises Eyebrows, Controversy At CSU
|
|
|
Mesa Councilman Defends Pledge Boycott |
Court rules for man arrested for swearing at meeting |
|
Mesa City Council member Tom Rawles (right) sits while Mike Whalen (left) and Kyle Jones (center) stand during the Pledge of Allegiance |
|
Journalists walk dangerous line in Russia
Skeptics doubt authorities will solve latest killing |
No Atheists (Still) Need Apply |
Bill creates shield for pledge
House OKs barring federal jurists from ruling on 'under God' issue |
Pot-using church loses its founders
Two step aside, saying charges hinder duties |
Conflicting emotions about flag nothing new
Debate going on through much of U.S. history |
Law backs off from Bisbee 'artist' |
100,000 march for immigrant rights
Massive crowds highlight economic, political might |
Silent protest by students greets state official's speech |
Students
launch protest at Capitol |
Man contends 'the finger' is free speech |
Study finds no plus or minus for vouchers, charters |
Voucher bill on path to Napolitano
Public tuition funds for private schools need final House OK |
Microsoft shuts down Chinese blogger |
Oklahoma school ends dancing ban with first prom |
Atheist sues to get 'In God we trust' off coins |
Turkish free-speech trial halted |
NOT protected by the First Amendment
Mayor Blames Gangs for Anti-Nazi Violence |
Thousands Gather in D.C. for 'Millions More Movement |
Creationists make stand vs. evolution in science museum |
Antiwar Protests Commence in Washington |
Federal judge declares Pledge unconstitutional |
Antiwar Protests Commence in Washington |
Suit over letter to Citizen tossed by high court |
Mexican reporters fear gangs
A war is waged on newspapers' ability to inform |
Commandments rulings: Mixed message or sensible?
In a split decision Monday over Ten Commandments displays on public ground, the U.S. Supreme Court carved out a middle ground that recognizes religion's place in the public arena while making clear the government should not lend its seal of approval to a particular faith. |
First Amendment Gains Support as Post-9/11 Fears Ease
USA TODAY -Mark Memmott-June 28, 2005 |
Ten Commandments marker to stay in Phoenix |
McCreary County v. ACLU opinion, written by Justice David Souter
Dissenting opinion by Justice Antonin Scalia |
Open-government bill advances |
Justices Disallow Ten Commandments in Courthouses
In Separate Decision, Court Upholds Displays on Government Land |
Judge sentences offenders to attend church |
Crusading Mexican editor killed |
Official-English bills gain in
Legislature
Both the House and Senate voted Tuesday to declare English the official language of the state. |
Court orders pagan parents to 'protect' son
A Wiccan activist and his ex-wife are challenging a court's order that they must protect their 9-year-old son from what it calls their "non-mainstream religious beliefs and rituals." |
Both sides
rally over abortion
'Roe vs. Wade' anniversary marked |
Tucosn to get rid of 34 billboards
"Free speech not an issue" |
Why the court
was right about the Patriot Act |
Suit: School
God ban includes 'Declaration' |
|
|
|
They
Dress to Express
Political T shirts—on the right and the
left—pit teenagers against their school administrators |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|