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A woman who belongs to the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster is allowed to wear a pasta strainer on her head in her driver's license photo due to religious beliefs, the AP reports.
A Pastafarian displayed her allegiance to the Flying Spaghetti Monster in her Massachusetts driver’s license photo. Lindsay Miller of Lowell, Mass. cited that her religious beliefs as a member ...
A Nebraska inmate who has professed his allegiance to the divine Flying Spaghetti Monster lost his bid demanding that prison officials accommodate his Pastafarianism faith. A federal judge ...
But the BP workers who spotted it over 4,000 feet below the surface nicknamed it the "Flying Spaghetti Monster," after the satirical Internet deity it so closely resembles. New Scientist reports ...
To the rest of us, the Flying Spaghetti Monster looks like a giant heap of pasta and meatballs topped with eyeballs on stalks. As it turns out, both interpretations are correct. In the past few ...
Obi Canuel refuses to remove the colander. He does it, he claims, because he believes the world was created by an intoxicated Flying Spaghetti Monster You can save this article by registering for ...
The Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster started in the United States in 2005 as part of the backlash against the Kansas State Board of Education’s decision to teach intelligent design in ...
Niko Alm was allowed to wear the unusual headgear as it is deemed a suitable accessory for his 'Pastafarian' religion, the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. Mr Alm, an entrepreneur ...
Members of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, or Pastafarians, march through St. Petersburg, Russia. Getty Images BERLIN — A German court has ruled that local authorities are entitled ...