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The patient in Dallas being treated for Ebola has been given an experimental drug but remains in critical condition.
Other fugitives have eluded justice for months or even years.
In our regular weekly feature, we'll be taking a look at the winners and losers of the week in the struggle for the rights of working families. The winners will be the persons or organizations that go above and beyond to expand or protect the rights of working families, while the losers will be whoever went above and beyond to limit or deny those rights.
Texas Health officials hold a news conference on briefing on the Ebola pandemic.
Dallas officials, including County Judge Clay Jenkins and Mayor Mike Rawlings, have scheduled a 3 p.m. ET news conference to local response to Ebola.
County clerks are preparing themselves for an influx of marriage license applications now that same-sex couples in Virginia are allowed to marry.
Texas Gov. Rick Perry calls on Washington to take immediate steps to minimize the outbreak of Ebola in the United States.
On Election Day, some 300,000 registered voters in Wisconsin could have their voices silenced. And that’s exactly what Gov. Scott Walker (R), the Republican-majority state legislature and their corporate and extremist backers had in mind when they passed the restrictive voter photo ID law in 2011.
Ashoka Mukpo's parents said they begged him not to go to Liberia but he insisted.
At Nebraska Medical Center relatives of Ebola-stricken Ashoka Mukpo, say he’s “enormously relieved” to be in the U.S. for “good medical treatment.”