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  • An inquiry into why the world's largest database on reproductive health restricted searches on the term "abortion" found the block was triggered by articles from an abortion advocacy magazine available through the POPLINE site.
  • The Oceanside Police Department wants to get the attention of parents whose kids play hooky. It has asked the City Council to adopt a law that would let police to issue fines to the parents of student
  • Tom Fudge On The Horton Hears A Who! Controversy: The Intersection Of Politics And Art
  • Life is Not a Video Game
  • Forty years ago Thursday, North Vietnamese soldiers and Viet Cong launched a series of coordinated attacks against targets in South Vietnam. Tet marked the beginning of the end of U.S. involvement in South Vietnam.
  • What are the rights of employees and employers, and how have those rights changed as technology becomes a staple of the American work day? We talk about the important and oftentimes confusing legal is
  • How did Sen. John McCain manage to make 150,000 votes enough to win South Carolina when the 250,000 votes he got in 2000 left him a loser to George W. Bush? He had a lot of help from Fred Thompson.
  • Forget taking that bottle of beer or liquor to the beach: The one-year trial ban of drinking alcohol on beaches is in effect. The ban also applies to bay shores and coastal parks. First-time violators
  • South Carolina might be key to Sen. John McCain's presidential bid. The state, which holds its Republican primary Jan. 19, is home to thousands of military veterans. McCain is a war hero. The state's Democratic primary is set for Jan. 26.
  • Some administration advisers say if security conditions continue to improve, the United States may be able to shift its mission in Iraq away from war-fighting by the end of this year. Others say Iraq's political leaders are far from making the needed compromises to temper sectarian tension.
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