In Encinitas, California, 134 miles east of Calexico, a 17-year-old undocumented student at San Dieguito Academy lives in constant fear of her family being deported.
Le Pen, with a message that is strongly anti-immigrant and anti-European Union, captured 21 percent of voters aged 18 to 24. By contrast, Macron won 18 percent of the same group.
In this video, correspondent Ian Mason pinpoints a person who epitomizes both of these events — Brian Ettling, a park ranger in Crater Lake, Oregon, whose new boss is President Donald J. Trump.
[Editor's note: This story includes graphic images and quotes that could be offensive or disturbing to some readers.] Passion, concern and conflicting opinions rose among high school students in Los Angeles after the U.S. military struck the Syrian government's Shayrat Air Base in response to a chemical weapons attack on Syrian civilians on April 4.
Los Angeles’ latest measles outbreak, which was centered in the Orthodox Jewish community, has been over since February. But low school immunization rates may have caused it, and uncertainty around immunization rates may contribute to the next one, according to county health officials.
As I began to film, I wanted to focus on technology taking away from our everyday lives. We often look right past simple things, such as growing flowers and chirping birds. But the beauty in our world won't last forever, and if everyone is looking down on their smartphones, they're missing their lives passing them by.
Such media mistakes serve as a painful illustration of the proclivity of some news organizations to cry terrorism first instead of focusing on facts. Patchy and inaccurate initial reports swell into a narrative in which the horrific actions of an individual are all too quickly tagged with an extremist ideology.
U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos made headlines again this week with comments on the need for more school choice for high school students, saying that public schools often don't offer enough options and proposing charter schools or vouchers for private schools instead. But public school districts often do offer choices, as GSS correspondent James Stars shows in this report.