Rethinking Public School ‘Fat Letters’ for Students
Against some doctors’ recommendations, the state may soon cease notifying the parents of extremely overweight children
Against some doctors’ recommendations, the state may soon cease notifying the parents of extremely overweight children
In the News: France taking Russian plan to the UN, Opposition to Syria Strike Grows, O’Donnell Grills Weiner, and the Words of John Kerry
Correction appended at 9:24 a.m., Sept. 11, 2013
The drill is well known: A student brings a gun to school and suffers the consequences through detention, suspension, or expulsion. It’s the price children and teens in the …
The U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations is redirecting her attention away from the UN and toward the American public
The rally will focus on the Affordable Care Act, which Republicans have been pushing to either defund or shut down the government
The daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney told a group of Tea Party members if she were in Congress now she would vote “no” on Syria strike
Many had been here before, for the historic 1963 March on Washington
They gathered in Washington to honor his legacy and continue his fight for equality
The agenda of the events commemorating the 50th anniversary of the march on Washington stands in contrast to the unifying nature of Dr. King
Attorney General Holder announced the Department is suing Texas over the state’s new voter ID law and 2011 redistricting maps.
In the news; NSA breaks privacy rules ; Islamists call for day of ‘rage’ in Egypt; Defense Department approves new measures on sexual assault; and Vogue profiles Wendy Davis.
In the news: Egypt’s death toll rises; why the Jacksons got off easy; Chris Christie on medical marijuana; TIME reflects on MLK.
Critics say Washington lags behind state-level innovations that are saving money and reducing crime