A second federal lawsuit was filed Thursday against a controversial Oklahoma immigration law.
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NPR's A Martinez talks to Stephen Dziedic of the Australian Broadcasting company about the deadly landslide in Papau New Guinea.
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Efforts to find the remains of missing U.S. service members and reunite them with their families have shifted from Vietnam War-era cases to older ones from WWII and the Korean War.
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It’s been 100 years since the 1924 Immigration Act was signed into law. It shaped the U.S. immigration system and established racial quotas.
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Former U.S. Attorney Harry Litman breaks down three broad possible conclusions the jury could reach.
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Keeping kids active and healthy can be an uphill battle, especially in the age of smartphones, video games and other distractions. A new volunteer initiative in Edmond is getting kids’ hearts pumping — and their wheels turning.
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The number of black vultures Oklahoma livestock producers can capture or kill with a sub-permit has increased from five to 10.
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Palestinian health workers said Israeli airstrikes hit tents for displaced people in the southern Gaza city and “numerous” others were trapped in flaming debris.
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The Birmingham-Southern College's baseball team is scheduled to play in the College World Series on May 31 — the same day their school is set to shut down permanently.
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Hundreds of thousands of people across the region had no power early on Monday, and other states were preparing for severe weather as the storm system moved east.
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Seventy percent of the money for general election ads has been spent in just seven states. Here's what the campaigns are focused on.
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A landslide in Papua New Guinea has buried some 670 people in six remote villages, according to the U.N. and Australia's foreign affairs ministry.
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NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks to Associated Press polling editor Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux about how contraception became politicized among Christians in the U.S..