REWIND Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep (Originally aried 12/5/2017)

REWIND Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep (Originally aried 12/5/2017)

Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Radio Archive, Episode 839 , Segment 4

Episode: Religious Freedom vs. Equal Rights, The Hijab in the United States, Is college for Everyone?

  • Jun 21, 2018 11:00 pm
  • 20:00 mins

Guests: Cheryl Haggard, Founding Parent of “Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep”; Cliff Lawson, Volunteer Photographer One of the hardest things parents hope they never have to face, is the death of a child. When a baby is stillborn, or dies soon after birth, that grief is complicated by the fact that there was never really time to make memories.  A nonprofit called, “Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep” connects grieving parents with volunteer professional photographers to help parents preserve those fleeting last moments with a child.   Click here to learn more about “Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep.”

Other Segments

Must the Battle Between Religious Freedom and Equal Rights Be Winner-Take-All?

21 MINS

Guest: Shapri LoMaglio, Vice President for Government and External Relations, Council for Christian Colleges & Universities, Washington, D.C. A week ago, Canada’s Supreme Court issued a major ruling that is expected to having rippling effects across North America. The case involves a private Christian university in Vancouver called Trinity Western, which planned to open a law school, but has been stymied by the regional law society’s refusal to give accreditation. The reason is that the law society objects to Trinity Western’s mandatory code of conduct for students and employees which prohibits extramarital sex and does not recognize gay marriage. The law society says that discriminates against LGBT people. Canada’s Supreme Court agreed. Faith-based institutions across the US and Canada were watching this case closely.

Guest: Shapri LoMaglio, Vice President for Government and External Relations, Council for Christian Colleges & Universities, Washington, D.C. A week ago, Canada’s Supreme Court issued a major ruling that is expected to having rippling effects across North America. The case involves a private Christian university in Vancouver called Trinity Western, which planned to open a law school, but has been stymied by the regional law society’s refusal to give accreditation. The reason is that the law society objects to Trinity Western’s mandatory code of conduct for students and employees which prohibits extramarital sex and does not recognize gay marriage. The law society says that discriminates against LGBT people. Canada’s Supreme Court agreed. Faith-based institutions across the US and Canada were watching this case closely.