Soy Carmín on MSN
10 Women Who Changed History So Women Could Vote and Go to School
Meet the remarkable women whose courage and activism helped secure voting rights, education, and greater opportunities for women worldwide.
Could visiting space aliens one day seek U.S. citizenship? It’s not that far-fetched under Supreme Court ruling.
28don MSN
Wisconsin women’s suffrage exhibit highlights local leaders who helped ratify 19th Amendment
On June 10, 1919, Wisconsin became the first state to ratify the 19th Amendment. In Oshkosh, much of that push can be traced back to Jessie Jack Hooper.
Upon America's 250th birthday, women have little to celebrate, and much work ahead to accomplish autonomy, respect and equality.
WyoFile on MSN
Wyoming women and America’s ever-evolving democracy
As America celebrates its 250th anniversary, WyoFile will examine the degree to which Wyoming lives up to its moniker as the ...
After the Toledo Museum of Art canceled a pioneering exhibition of glass cannabis pipes, many people wondered what lay behind ...
Voting rights in America were a Republican thing for more than 100 years, but the GOP made an about-face on the issue ...
The conservative justices see 'originalism' as a guiding principle to prevent judges from changing the Constitution to adjust ...
Jill Lepore’s book tells the story of one of the world’s oldest written Constitutions. There may be something paradoxical ...
Even as the nation celebrates the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, women’s history is still not taught in Vermont schools. Right now, there is no requirement in the state ...
Brigham Young University Professor Tyson Reeder believes the founding fathers hoped to create a great nation when they signed ...
On June 25, the Lincoln Memorial Undercroft — a $69 million exhibit underneath the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC — ...
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