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But Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch has asked the court to use the case to overturn Roe v. Wade, and a subsequent 1992 endorsement of abortion rights in Planned Parenthood v. Casey .
Members of the Mississippi National Guard are heading to Washington, D.C., to help provide security for Wednesday's inauguration.National Guard commanders got the word Thursday that troops would ...
Members of the Mississippi National Guard have been deployed to Washington, D.C., to assist with response to demonstrations in the wake of George Floyd's death in the custody of Minneapolis ...
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WJTV Jackson on MSNMississippi man among those killed in DC air collision - MSNWASHINGTON (WJTV) – A man with ties to Mississippi died after a collision between an American Airlines passenger jet and an ...
Hundreds of demonstrators for and against abortion rights protested in front of the U.S. Supreme Court steps in Washington D.C. as nine justices heard arguments for a Mississippi abortion ban case ...
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Can't go to DC for the festival? Where to see cherry blossoms in Mississippi, the SouthWhy does Washington, D.C. have so many cherry trees? The Yoshino Cherry trees were a gift from the mayor of Tokyo in 1912. The gift celebrates the friendship between the Japanese and American people.
Mayors from 10 states along the Mississippi River flew to Washington, D.C. earlier this month to lobby for funding to protect and restore one of the world’s most important working rivers.
Several Republican Mississippi lawmakers are now seeking to replace confederate statues representing the state in Washington, D.C. just weeks after Arkansas installed a statue of a civil rights ...
Other vestiges were also placed by the state nearly 100 years ago in Washington, D.C.’s Statuary Hall, displaying Confederate figures Jefferson Davis and James Z. George.
Other vestiges were also placed by the state nearly 100 years ago in Washington, D.C.’s Statuary Hall, displaying Confederate figures Jefferson Davis and James Z. George.
Other vestiges were also placed by the state nearly 100 years ago in Washington, D.C.’s Statuary Hall, displaying Confederate figures Jefferson Davis and James Z. George.
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