What’s Trending for Conservatives? ‘Racism Talk Breeds Disunity’
Since the exoneration of George Zimmerman on July 13, we
Since the exoneration of George Zimmerman on July 13, we
ALBUQUERQUE — At the New Mexico Holocaust and Intolerance Museum, three
A federal jury in Omaha, Neb., decided on Wednesday that Creighton University had discriminated against a deaf medical student and violated federal laws by not providing him with special equipment and interpreters, the Associated Press reported. The jurors did not, however, award any damages to the student, Michael S. Argenyi, because they determined that
Long Beach police chief vows a thorough investigation of the incident in which officers used batons and a
FORT WORTH — After years of enormous
Columbia State Community College, in Columbia, Tenn., has determined that a psychology professor did not violate students’ freedoms of speech or religion when she asked her classes last spring to wear gay-pride ribbons for a day and write an essay about the responses they experienced, The Daily Herald, a local newspaper, reported.
ALBUQUERQUE — The decision by clerks in six of New Mexico’s most populous counties to start issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples has added a sense of urgency to a fight that some of the state’s top political leaders
A U.S. Supreme Court ruling in June kept alive the right of colleges and universities to consider race in admissions. But in some states — starting with California in 1996 — voters have taken away that right, barring public colleges and universities from considering race and ethnicity in admitting students. While colleges and higher
Read more in the Los Angeles Times.
LEITH, N.D. — The bearded man with thinning, gray-and-bleach-blond hair flapping down his neck first appeared in this tiny agricultural
town last year, quietly and inconspicuously roaming