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Cross can stay at Sept. 11 museum in New York, court rules Published: Jul. 30, 2014, 12:18 a.m. The cross on display at the 9/11 memorial and museum in New York City.
NEW YORK – A judge should toss out a lawsuit by a national atheists group seeking to stop the display of a cross-shaped steel beam found among the wreckage of the World Trade Center, lawyers for ...
In August 2012, the National September 11 Memorial & Museum sought to have the lawsuit dismissed. It contended that the museum was operated by an independent nonprofit corporation and its ...
NEW YORK — A cross-shaped steel beam pulled from the rubble of the collapsed World Trade Center in New York days after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks can be displayed in the national memorial ...
The cross as seen inside the National September 11 Memorial & Museum. The American Atheists initially sued the Port Authority in Manhattan Supreme Court in July 2011.
A judge last year tossed out a lawsuit on the cross, rejecting the arguments of American Atheists, which sued the National September 11 Memorial & Museum's operators in 2011 on constitutional ...
(CBS News) The National September 11 Memorial and Museum's planned presentation of the World Trade Center cross-shaped steel beam, which became a famous Ground Zero symbol right after the ...
An atheist group has filed a lawsuit seeking to prevent a cross made out of World Trade Center steel beams from going on display at the 9/11 Memorial Museum.
The memorial and museum are set to be dedicated on Sept. 11, 2011, the tenth anniversary of the attacks. Filed Under: News & Politics , Real Estate , Culture , Politics , atheists , 9/11 Memorial ...
The Ground Zero Cross went through a long journey with Father Brian Jordan before finding its place at the 9/11 Memorial Museum. ... Jordan first witnessed the cross on Sept. 23, 2001.
President Obama on Thursday dedicated the new Sept. 11 memorial museum, calling it a “sacred place of healing and hope” to recover from the nation’s worst terrorist attack. Here a… ...
"The death of Osama bin Laden is a huge part of the history, and we have an absolute obligation to tell it," National Sept. 11 Memorial Museum President Joe Daniels said Saturday.