As the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments on Monday in a case focused on whether a Christian law students' group has a right to exclude people who engage in homosexual behavior, the justices appeared deeply split—not just in their interpretation of the law, but in their understanding of the key facts underlying the dispute.

 Kentucky Supreme Court Upholds Ruling to Deny State Funds to Religious College

By Ashley Marchand

The Supreme Court of Kentucky upheld a lower court's ruling on Thursday that the University of the Cumberlands, a Baptist college in Williamsburg, Ky., could not keep $11-million in funds from the Kentucky General Assembly for a new pharmacy program.

The money, $10-million for a pharmacy school and $1-million more for pharmacy scholarships, was appropriated by the legislature in 2006 to establish a pharmacy program at Cumberlands. But the appropriation violated state laws that ban public financing of "any church, sectarian, or denominational school," according to the ruling by Justice Lisabeth H. Abramson.