Tonight on FISM News: national reactions to Friday’s overturn of Roe v. Wade and the president’s new gun reform legislation. Meanwhile, the Colorado Avalanche win their third Stanley Cup championship.
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Tonight on FISM News: national reactions to Friday’s overturn of Roe v. Wade and the president’s new gun reform legislation. Meanwhile, the Colorado Avalanche win their third Stanley Cup championship.
Last week new research was published in eLife, detailing how Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis), the bacteria that causes tuberculosis (TB), is able to transform and evolve in its environment.
An Amtrak train derailed in northern Missouri on Monday after hitting a dump truck at a crossing, the U.S. national passenger railroad service said, with CNN reporting that at least 50 were injured with multiple fatalities.
Voters in Colorado, Illinois, New York, Oklahoma, and Utah are heading to the polls for primaries and conservatives are watching several key elections.
On Saturday, in light of the Supreme Court’s overturn of Roe, the terrorist group “Jane’s Revenge” struck a pregnancy center in Lynchburg, Virginia.
South African mourners expressed anger and despair on Monday at the death of 21 teenagers in a tavern over the weekend, as investigating authorities said the youths were probably accidentally poisoned by something they ate, drank or smoked.
Airlines are scrambling to keep up with demand as the July 4th weekend approaches, which analysts are predicting will be the busiest travel weekend since the pandemic.
The federal judge decision that widened the scope of immigration arrests went into effect over the weekend, despite an ongoing appeal. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) says they will comply with the court order.
Credit Suisse was convicted by Switzerland’s Federal Criminal Court on Monday of failing to prevent money laundering by a Bulgarian cocaine trafficking gang in the country’s first criminal trial of one of its major banks.
Fox cites parents in Maryland, Oregon, and Michigan who reported that school districts in their communities are charging anywhere from $1,500 to tens of millions of dollars to fulfill freedom of information document requests.