WORLD Radio News - WORLD Radio News: 11-07-25 (3/3)
Episode Date: November 7, 2025The latest headlines in three minutes from WORLD updated three times throughout the day.Made possible in part by Medi-Share — Affordable, Biblical health care for Christians, built on faith and com...munity. To learn more visit: https://medishare.com/world.Sign-up for the daily Sift email at thesift.org.Support sound journalism, grounded in facts and Biblical truth at wng.org/donate.
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With World Radio News, I'm Paul Butler.
In Washington, D.C., protesters gathered outside the U.S. Supreme Court building this morning.
They were demanding that the High Court choose not to take up a case
that could challenge the legality of so-called same-sex marriage.
The justices are considering an appeal from former Kentucky court clerk Kim Davis.
In 2015, Davis refused to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples
in the wake of the High Court's Obergefeld decision earlier that evening.
She spent five days in jail after a judge found her in contempt of court.
She's now asking for the justices to overturn a lower court's order that she pay $360,000 in damages and attorney's fees to the couple.
Her attorney cited Justice Clarence Thomas, who is currently the only justice to publicly call for the overturning of the same-sex marriage ruling.
New headaches at America's airports.
The FAA's order to cancel 10% of air traffic across dozens of airports nationwide.
why today had air travelers scrambling to come up with contingency plans.
Karen Soika said she's one of the passengers whose flight was canceled.
They rebooked me out of JFK an hour earlier with an 11-hour layover in some place called Port of Spain.
The FAA says those cancellations are the result of air traffic control staffing shortages
created by the government shutdown, which is now the longest in U.S. history.
Earlier this year, Texas and Louisiana both passed laws requiring public school classrooms to display the Ten Commandments.
But a U.S. Federal Appeals Court says it will hear challenges to those laws in January.
World's Dennis Crowley reports.
Lower courts in Texas and Louisiana have issued injunctions to stop the displays.
In Texas, a U.S. district judge says the law favors Christianity over other faiths.
In Louisiana, a federal three-judge panel has taken a similar action.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton argues the Ten Commandments are a cornerstone of American law and moral courage.
For World, I'm Dennis Crowley.
And finally, just two months after becoming the acting president of Trinity Christian College in Chicago suburbs,
Janine Mosy is announcing that the school is closing its doors at the conclusion of this academic year.
There is no sustainable path forward for our beloved.
institution. Trinity is offering
teach-out agreements with a handful of other
regional institutions where students can
continue their studies, promising
that credits will transfer while
also working with the students to keep costs
similar to their existing agreements.
According to bestcolleges.com,
more than 80 private, non-profit
colleges or universities have merged
or closed in the U.S. since
2020. For World Radio,
I'm Paul Butler. For more
sound journalism grounded in facts and biblical
truth, visit worldradio.com.
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