Daniella Cheslow
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                        As thousands of National Guard troops begin deploying to the nation's capital ahead of Inauguration Day, police ask for help in identifying rioters who stormed the Capitol building on Wednesday.
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                        After her teenaged son drowned, Pastor Michelle Thomas decided to bury him in a old burial ground she had come across earlier while searching for a new site for her church.
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                        Religiously speaking, it was not a substitute for the real pilgrimage, which all Muslims must try to make in their lifetime. But it inspired many to go once it's possible again.
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                        Three African American ER physicians in Washington, D.C., recount experiences on their wards, where Black patients make up the vast majority of the city's COVID-19 fatalities.
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                        The newly re-elected president made a promise to redistribute white-owned land to blacks. But it's a tense and controversial process.
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                        Researchers say teaching seals to copy melodies might help inform speech therapy for humans.
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                        In Jerusalem, where he's meeting with Israeli and Russian security officials, the national security adviser says the U.S. military is "ready to go" as he warns Iran against seeking a nuclear weapon.
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                        Advice columnist E. Jean Carroll repeats her claim that President Trump assaulted her in the 1990s, even as he tells reporters her story is "a total false accusation."
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                        Without offering specifics, the president says he is increasing sanctions as Washington accuses Tehran of downing a U.S. drone and attacking foreign-owned oil tankers in the Gulf of Oman.
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                        U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo pledges to guarantee freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz, a major oil route where the two tankers were hit.
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                        Ahead of the Paris Air Show, Dennis Muilenburg concedes his company did not give enough information about a malfunctioning safety light.
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                        Argentina's energy minister says electricity has been fully restored after a massive failure halted trains and darkened homes and traffic lights.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
