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American Women Who Were Anti-Suffragettes
Who were the women who worked against voting rights for women in the early 20th century? Some were involved in community and charity — but not electoral politics.
Clinton Says She Was 'Right' About 'Vast Russia Conspiracy'; Investigations Ongoing
The 2016 Democratic presidential nominee said she is "leaning" toward believing that President Trump's campaign colluded with the Russians, though there has not been evidence of such cooperation.
'We Will Not Give In To Fear': A Day After Shooting, Congress Plays Ball
Democrats won the annual congressional baseball game, but this year, the score didn't matter.
DACA, One Student's Story
More than 750,000 young people have registered under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. Many, like college senior Daisy Romero, worry about their future in the U.S.
Was Rand Paul's Plagiarism Dishonest Or A Breach Of Good Form?
The flap over the Kentucky senator's articles and speeches is just the latest in a series of cases of plagiarism by high-profile journalists and politicians. Linguist Geoff Nunberg looks at the way the word plagiarism has been used since it was invented by the Romans and wonders if it's always immoral or just bad form.
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6:13
Oxford To Honor Suu Kyi After Years Of House Arrest
Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi is getting an honorary doctorate from Oxford Wednesday. Last week, she formally accepted the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo. As she tours Europe, Suu Kyi is being honored for her nonviolent political protest against a military junta that kept her under house arrest for most of the last 20 years. But her philosophy of civil disobedience might have to change to fit her new role as a politician back home.
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4:36
New theme park wants kids to visit and play with the machines but then stay to work in the industry
The construction theme park for kids has teamed up with Texas A&M University's Department of Construction
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3:52
'It's A Joke': Flaring Expert Finds Big Problems In Report From Texas Oil And Gas Regulator
The amount of natural gas that oil companies burn off in Texas as a waste product could power every home in the state . It’s an industry practice known...
Emmett Till is known for his death. A new film about his mother also honors his life
In 1955, a 14-year-old Black boy was lynched in Mississippi. Till tells the story of Mamie Till-Mobley, whose insistence on an open-casket funeral helped ignite the civil rights movement.
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6:48
Obama Eyes CNN's Gupta For Surgeon General
President-elect Barack Obama is reported to have picked CNN'S medical correspondent Sanjay Gupta to be the next surgeon general.
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