Vkmj 1,000 protesters march from Wall Street to NYPD
CBS/AP CINCINNATI - A federal judge has given the go-ahead for trial in a lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Cincinnati by a Catholic school teacher fired after she became pregnant through artificial insemination.The archdiocese fired Christa Dias in 2010, saying the sing
stanley cup le woman vi
stanley cup website olated Roman Catholic Church doctrine by using artificial insemination. U.S. District Judge Arthur Spiegel says in his ruling last week that Dias was a non-Catholic computer teacher with no role in ministering or teaching Catholic doctrine.An archdiocese spokesman says that parents who pay to send their children to Catholic school expect them to be taught in an environment reflecting Catholic moral teaching and that employee contracts specify they will abide by church teachings.The Cincinnati Enquirer reports that Dias wants compensation for medical bills and other expenses in a case that could set a national precedent. I hope that it stops them from doing it again, Dias told the Enquirer. She said she was fired after telling the Archdiocese she was five and a half months pregnant and needed to go on maternity leave. The Enquirer reports Dias was initially fired for being single and pregnant but once her employer found out that could violate anti-discrimination laws, both federal and state, she was fired for being artificially inseminated, which is considered gr
stanley water bottle avely immoral by the Roman Catholic Church. I hope that people in my situation say this is not appropriate to do, she said Aoha Marines study shows resistance to women in combat
The
stanley cup newsmen ignored the Japanese bombs shaking seventy-five feet of rock above their heads. It was June 1940, and a team of Chinese and Western broadcasters continued their reports from a tunnel beneath Chongqing, China wartime capital, the world most bombed ci
cups stanley ty. Seven thousand miles away, in Ventura, a dentist woke early to listen to their broadcast. As he did every morning, beginning precisely at 5:53 a.m., Dr. Charles Stuart spent two hours carefully monitoring recording levels as acetate discs recorded the broadcast from XGOY, the Chinese government radio station. Next to him, wearing dental assistant whites and huge headphones pressed to her ears, Stuart secretary鈥攁nd wife鈥擜lacia Held, transcribed every word. Finally, a familiar farewell closed another day broadcasts. XGOY is signing off now, declared Melville Jacoby, a twenty-three-year-old freelance journalist hired to compile and read the station broadcasts. This is the Voice of China, the Chinese international broadcasting station, Szechuan, China. Good morning America and goodnight China. Seven decades later, I ;ve spent years chasing every clue I can about Mel life as a correspondent in wartime China. A cousin of my grandmother , Mel grew up in on
stanley vaso e of Los Angeles first Jewish families, and I wanted to know more than the family legend about the cousin who became Time Far East bureau chie