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100 Stories on First Amendment Rights
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Time.com: Court Upholds Web Material Ruling

A federal appeals court agreed with a lower court ruling that struck down a 1998 law intended to protect children from sexual material on the Internet

Atheist soldier sues Army for 'unconstitutional' discrimination

Army Spc. Jeremy Hall was raised Baptist.

Fortune: The man who beat the SEC

Phil Goldstein became a hedge fund manager thanks to a pair of gray sweatpants. In the summer of 1992 the 47-year-old civil engineer walked into Las Vegas's Mirage hotel to meet his first potential investor. The shorts he was wearing didn't meet the dress code of Moongate, a Chinese restaurant where the two men had planned to meet. He thought the rule was arbitrary, so he went to a nearby gift shop, purchased a pair of sweatpants, changed into them, and returned to the restaurant. After the meal he changed back into his shorts and returned the pants for store credit. When Goldstein also told the prospect that he was staying off the Strip, at a $39-a-night motel, the deal was sealed. "This is a man I want managing my money," the investor told his broker that night.

Polygamy roll shows 21 wives for one member

In the secretive, illegal world of American polygamy, life has been good to 67-year-old Wendell Loy Nielsen of Eldorado, Texas.

Kevorkian Case: Appeals court dismisses defamation suit

Calling him "libel proof," a Michigan appeals court Monday dismissed Dr. Jack Kevorkian's defamation suit against two medical groups that called him a killer in their literature.

Church ordered to pay $10.9 million for funeral protest

A federal jury in Baltimore, Maryland, Wednesday awarded $10.9 million to a father of a Marine whose funeral was picketed by members of a fundamentalist church carrying signs blaming soldiers' deaths on America's tolerance of homosexuals.

Emotion runs high in debate over ousting student editor

Hundreds of students turned out at Colorado State University to speak their minds on whether the student newspaper's editor should lose his job over four words.

Calls for student editor to resign after 'F**k Bush' column

The College Republicans, a student organization at Colorado State University, weren't planning anything special for the last week of September.

Your opinion: Reaction to police using Taser on student

Two University of Florida police officers were placed on leave Tuesday after using an electronic stun gun to subdue a student at a campus forum. Read an account of the incident from a student who was there.

Time.com: China's Olympics: One Year to Go

Construction is on track for the 2008 Games, but is Beijing ready for the environmental and political challenges?

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