Laxmi Sargara, 18, wed Rakesh when she was just one and he was three. She grew up with her own family, only finding out she was married when her in-laws came to claim her this month. Child marriages are illegal in India but are still common in many parts of the country, especially in rural and poorer communities.
But Our Lady of Sorrows, a fundamentalist Catholic school in Phoenix that lost twice to Mesa Prep during the regular season, chose to forfeit the championship game rather than play a team fielding a female player. Our Lady of Sorrows school officials would not comment, but Sultzbach's mother, Pamela Sultzbach, said her daughter and the rest of the team received the news after Wednesday afternoon's practice.
The study was conducted by the University of Granada Department of Experimental Psychology Óscar Iborra, Luis Pastor and Emilio Gómez Milán, and has been published in the journal Consciousness and Cognition. This is the first time that a scientific explanation has been provided for the esoteric phenomenon of the aura, a supposed energy field of luminous radiation surrounding a person as a halo, which is imperceptible to most human beings.
CAHS President Rosslyn Ives on behalf of all Australia's State Humanist Societies and Humanist Society of Queensland Inc. President Maria Proctor invite your attendance at The 2012 Australian Humanist of the Year award presentataton to Mr Ron Williams
Please RSVP to HSQ Treasurer at treasurer@hsq.org.au 0420 676578 by 26 May 2012 (The venue has restricted space, so we need numbers confirmed).
Mr. Ron Williams, the Toowoomba father of six who took the Commonwealth Government to the High Court to test the legality of the $500m Howard-Gillard school chaplaincy funding, is the recipient of the 2012 Council of Australian Humanist Society of the Year award.
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As organizer of Hamtramck High School’s first all-girl prom, which conforms to religious beliefs forbidding dating, dancing with boys or appearing without a head scarf in front of males, Tharima, 17, was forging a new rite of passage for every teenage Muslim girl who had ever spent prom night at home, wistfully watching the limousines roll by.
The Humanist Society of Queensland advocates for the rights of non-religious people and works to combat the influence of religion on government. We want to ensure that human rights are upheld over religious rights. We fight the privileges religious groups demand and are sometimes granted. Our vision is of a world in which all individuals are treated fairly regardless of ethnicity, sex or system of belief. We campaign for an open and secular society and are willing to work with others of different beliefs for the common good.We are affiliated with The Council of Australian Humanists Societies and The International Humanist and Ethical Union
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