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View Post

In UK First, Court Convicts Mother Of Female Genital Mutilation

By Vanessa Romo

It’s the first time anyone has been successfully prosecuted under the anti-FGM law, passed more than 30 years ago. Officials say the mother performed the procedure on her 3-year-old daughter in 2017.

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Calls For Resignation As Va. Governor Apologizes for Racist Image In 1984 Yearbook

By Sarah McCammon

Ralph Northam, a pediatric neurologist and Democrat, was elected in 2017. The photo shows a person wearing blackface standing next to another person wearing a Ku Klux Klan robe.

View Post

Warren Apologizes To Cherokee Nation For DNA Test

By Asma Khalid

Last fall, Sen. Elizabeth Warren released the results of a DNA test indicating she has Native American ancestry. The move backfired; Warren was hesitant to admit she did something wrong — until now.

View Post

White House Says State Of The Union Will Be Bipartisan Pitch, Even As Shutdown Looms

By Jessica Taylor

The speech the White House outlined belies the deep divisions right now not only between Republicans and Democrats but between President Trump and Congress, including some within his own party.

View Post

ICE Failed to Hold Detention Center Contractors Accountable, Report Finds

By Charles Lane

The Department of Homeland Security inspector general found 14,000 deficiencies at facilities where migrants in the country illegally are held but issued only two fines.

View Post

Trump Administration Wants To Cut Drug Prices By Eliminating Middlemen’s Rebates

By Alison Kodjak

Pharmacy benefit managers are the focus of proposed regulations that could reduce drug costs for seniors and cut profits for middlemen. It could set a precedent for the broader market.

U.S. Ends Funding For Palestinian Security Forces That Counter Militants

By Daniel Estrin

The U.S. is ceasing aid to the Palestinians as a new anti-terror law takes effect Friday but will continue efforts to coordinate between Palestinians and Israelis.

View Post

At Least 3 Students Killed After School Walkway Collapses In South Africa

By Daniella Cheslow

“It is painful to see those tiny bodies in that state,” says Panyaza Lesufi, an education official in Gauteng province, where the high school is located.

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Heavy Student Loan Debt Forces Many Millennials To Delay Buying Homes

By Yuki Noguchi

The Federal Reserve says the big increase in student loan debt is creating a noticeable dent in younger people’s ability to buy homes. But economists say millennials may eventually catch up.

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Concealed By Cucumbers And False Floor, Massive Fentanyl Stash Found In Produce Truck

By Amy Held

U.S. Customs and Border Protection said agents at an Arizona port of entry uncovered over 254 pounds of fentanyl and nearly 395 pounds of methamphetamine in the trailer.

View Post

Lawsuit Details How The Sackler Family Allegedly Built An OxyContin Fortune

By Martha Bebinger

The Massachusetts attorney general alleges that the family behind Purdue Pharma knew that OxyContin was causing overdoses, yet continued to cash in. New documents in the case were released Thursday.

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U.S. Announces It Will Withdraw From Nuclear Arms Control Treaty With Russia

By Sasha Ingber

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the U.S. will suspend its obligations under the 1987 INF treaty as of Saturday and pull out in six months if Russia isn’t deemed to be in compliance.

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Trumps Exult Following Reports Of No Phone Contact Ahead Of 2016 Russia Meeting

By Philip Ewing

Donald Trump Jr. did not call his father from his cellphone as he was arranging a Trump Tower meeting to get dirt on Hillary Clinton, according to new reports.

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U.S. Added 304,000 Jobs In January; Shutdown Boosted Unemployment To 4 Percent

By Avie Schneider

Job growth picked up for the 100th consecutive month even as hundreds of thousands of federal workers were furloughed during the partial government shutdown. Wage growth held steady.

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Cory Booker Makes It Official: He’s Running For President In 2020

By Jessica Taylor

The 49-year-old New Jersey Democratic senator has long been seen as a likely presidential candidate. Booker, a former mayor of Newark, raised a national profile with an early embrace of social media.

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Oh Yes Son, They’re Talking To You: 20 Years Of ‘No Scrubs’

By Sidney Madden

TLC’s 1999 smash was a song women loved about the men they wouldn’t put up with. Two decades later, fans still take its message to heart when scrubs run amok.

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Net Neutrality Goes Back To Court

By Matthew S. Schwartz

It’s the first major court challenge since the Trump administration rolled back Obama-era net neutrality rules. Challengers say the FCC is abandoning its responsibility to ensure an open Internet.

View Post

Court Approves Historic Reforms To Chicago Police Department

By Matthew S. Schwartz

The new guidelines cover everything from police recruitment practices to policies on use of force. The department was harshly criticized by Obama’s Justice Department for civil rights violations.

View Post

The U.S. And Russia Are Stocking Up On Missiles And Nukes For A Different Kind Of War

By Geoff Brumfiel

The U.S. and Russia seem increasingly interested in battlefield nuclear weapons. Arms control advocates fear a return to the darkest days of the Cold War.

View Post

The Shutdown Is Over. Now The Federal Workforce Faces ‘Untold Morale Problems’

By Brian Naylor

“The federal government already has a recruitment problem, right?” said one expert. If “you watch this play out for the last 35 days, are you saying to yourself, ‘Sign me up for that?’ Probably not.”

View Post

FACT CHECK: Did The FBI Use Unusual Force When It Arrested Roger Stone?

By Miles Parks

The FBI and the Justice Department have been criticized for what some Republicans say was an excessive presence. But law enforcement veterans called it standard operating procedure.

View Post

Welcoming Girls, Boy Scouts Program Is Now Scouts BSA

By Katie Blackley

Younger girls have been able to join Cub Scouts for nearly a year, and more than 77,000 joined. Now, older girls 11-17 have a path to earn the organization’s highest rank.

View Post

ICE Confirms Force-Feeding Of Detainees On Hunger Strike

By Reynaldo Leaños Jr.

The agency said it respects the right to voice opinions and doesn’t retaliate against hunger strikers. “It’s extremely painful and it’s against their will,” a lawyer for two asylum-seekers told NPR.

Federal Appeals Court Blocks San Francisco Law On Ad Warnings For Sugary Drinks

By Richard Gonzales

A voter-approved law requiring large warnings about the effects of soda and other sugar-sweetened drinks was challenged by the beverage industry.

Iraqi Has Returned To U.S. After ICE Deported Him Against Court Orders

By Awadh al-Taee

Muneer Subaihani says immigration agents told him he would be in jail for life if he didn’t agree to be deported to Iraq. On Tuesday, in a rare event, he was admitted back into the U.S.

View Post

Asylum-Seeker Barred From Entering Australia Wins Its Richest Literary Prize

By Colin Dwyer

Behrouz Boochani, who has been detained offshore since 2013, had to compose his debut using WhatsApp messages. Now, that book has earned him the Victorian Prize for Literature

View Post

Months-Long Dutch Church Service To Protect Migrants Ends After Policy Shift

By Francesca Paris

The Bethel Church in The Hague carried on services for 96 days to protect the Tamrazyan family, Armenian migrants who have lived in the Netherlands for nearly nine years, from deportation.

View Post

Juan Guaidó Claims Police Raided His Home As He Struggles To Consolidate Power

By Daniella Cheslow

Juan Guaidó accuses Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro of sending police to intimidate his family. The U.S.-backed opposition leader seeks to oust Maduro and replace him as interim president.

View Post

Polar Vortex’s End Is Near, Forecasters Say, Promising A Strong Warmup

By Laurel Wamsley

By Saturday, the National Weather Service says, the central Plains area will see temperatures in the low 60s — nearly 20-25 degrees above normal.

View Post

Senate Republicans Rebuke President On Syria And Afghanistan Policy

By Tim Mak

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s amendment opposing a “precipitous withdrawal” from Syria was backed by many GOP senators who disagree with the president’s foreign policy.

View Post

Exploring The Mysterious Origins Of Mars’ 3-Mile-High Sand Pile

By Joe Palca

Space scientists on Earth have improvised a tool on the Mars rover to help them figure out how a giant mountain on the Red Planet came to be. Their surprising conclusion: It’s likely windswept sand.

View Post

U.S. Court Orders Syria To Pay $300 Million For Killing Of Journalist Marie Colvin

By Laurel Wamsley

The judge ruled that Colvin was killed by Syria and “targeted because of her profession, for the purpose of silencing those reporting on the growing opposition movement in the country.”

View Post

Here’s How PG&E’s Bankruptcy Might Hurt California’s Ambitious Climate Goals

By Lauren Sommer

PG&E is key to helping California meet its ambitious goal of zero carbon electricity by mid-century. Now there’s concern that the utility’s bankruptcy may set that back.

View Post

Sick And Tired? Scientists Find Protein That Puts Flies To Sleep And Fights Infection

By Jonathan Lambert

In the search for what triggers sleep, researchers stumbled upon a link between sleep and the immune system. A single fly gene gets turned on in sick flies, inducing sleep and an immune response.

View Post

WHO Warns Of Dire Conditions, Deaths Of Children At Refugee Camp In Syria

By Francesca Paris

More than 20,000 people, mostly women and children, have arrived at the Al-Hol camp in northeastern Syria in just two months. The World Health Organization says aid workers are struggling to keep up.

View Post

Homeland Security Created A Fake University In Michigan As Part Of Immigration Sting

By Bill Chappell

Eight alleged recruiters who were paid thousands of dollars for connecting students to the bogus university — which had an actual office space in Farmington Hills, Mich. — have been indicted.

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