Staff reportThe annual Wm. T. (Bill) Robinson III Institute for Religious Liberty will be held at Thomas More University tonight at 7 p.m. in Steigerwald Hall.The institute celebrates religiou
In siding with a web designer who doesn't want to make wedding sites for gay couples, the justices created a lot of uncertainty about which businesses have a right to refuse service to specific groups.
In siding with a web designer who doesn't want to make wedding sites for gay couples, the justices created a lot of uncertainty about which businesses have a right to refuse service to specific groups.
The rulings came one after the other over two days, barely allowing for reaction to settle in across the nation as the Supreme Court finished its term with four far-reaching decisions. Click the links for a review of the specific articles run in the Deseret News, including links to commentary from Taylor Randall, the president of the University of Utah on affirmative action and gaining admittance to the university, and Brett G. Scharffs, the Rex E. Lee Chair and a professor of law at the J. Reuben Clark Law School, in the case of a web designer that much of the media cast as a religion v. LGBTQ rights, but which is actually a free speech case. Before it, Gerald Groff had been happy with his work as a rural mail carrier and happy to be able to have Sundays off.