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Kyle Flood was suspended three games and fined $50,000 for contacting a faculty member over a player's grade.

"I am sorry that they offended some people, but, at the very least, I am happy that they started a conversation about diversity in Hollywood," he said.

Retired Adm. Robert Papp, the U.S. special representative to the Arctic Council, talks to NBC News' Cynthia McFadden about what America needs to stay in the race at the top of the world.

The Justice Department won't challenge travel booking site Expedia's purchase of Orbitz, saying the deal likely won't harm competitors or consumers.

Twins Brandon and LaKeisha Williams, who were aboard a bus that went over a highway overpass Tuesday in Houston, have broken bones, their mom said.

The group of four men and three women were canyoneering in Keyhole Canyone Monday when heavy rains caused flash floods.

America's northernmost city, home to 5,000 people above the Arctic Circle, is at the crossroads of change.

Retired Adm. Robert Papp talks to Barrow, Alaska, residents about their traditions and coming change.

The family of two students seriously hurt in a school bus crash tell reporters the teens are doing as well as can be expected. Two other students on the bus were killed in the accident.

Today, members of Congress, led by Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) and Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.), proposed the Workplace Action for a Growing Economy (WAGE) Act, legislation designed to strengthen protections for working people who join together to make positive change at work and make sure corporations that violate working people's rights face real consequences. In recent decades, workers' wages have been stagnant while too many employers take advantage of weak worker protection laws to slow down or stop working people from joining together to improve their lives. This legislation is aimed at reversing that trend.