CALIFORNIA — Attorneys for a student who was punished by Poway High School officials for wearing an anti-gay T-shirt to school are asking a federal appeals court to declare unconstitutional a school policy against offensive speech under which the student was punished. The Alliance Defense Fund and Advocates for Faith and Freedom on March 25 filed their opening brief with the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. In February a federal district judge ruled for a second time that Tyler Chase Harper's freedom of speech and free exercise of religion rights were not violated when administrators punished him for wearing the T-shirt during the 2004 Day of Silence observation at the high school. Full story...
Mikaela Sutherland Dunitz
In 1961, less than 50 years ago, President-elect Barack Obama's parents could not have married in half of the United States of America.
More than 500,000 people have died from Aids-related illnesses in the US in the last 27 years - but has Aids really changed the country?
The actor Paul Michael Glaser, who presents a Radio 2 documentary on the subject on Tuesday, has no doubt it has had a tremendous impact at a personal level.
Backers of a constitutional ban on gay marriage plan to reintroduce the proposal in next year's legislature, but in a slightly revised form.
Waiting to die
The BBC is following the lives of seven people from a community in Lesotho, as they struggle to live with the HIV crisis.
By Bob Smietana, The (Nashville) Tennessean
SMYRNA, Tenn. — In the rows of spinach and collard greens behind All Saints Episcopal Church, a quiet resurrection is underway.
The unexpectedly large and boisterous crowd that rallied against California's Proposition 8 at Philadelphia City Hall on a recent Saturday marked a turning point for the gay community.
A former University of Toledo administrator who was fired after writing a column for a local publication is suing the university.
AUGUSTA -- HIV and AIDS are prevalent in Maine, according to the Maine AIDS Alliance. Attacking the problem will require leadership and doing more with fewer state resources.
Today marks the 20th anniversary of World AIDS Day and one new tool to help slow this epidemic is an Internet-based service called inSPOT.
In the corridors of Ward 86, he's known as Patient Zero - the man willing to subject himself to any new medical trial that might help solve the riddle of HIV.
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