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10 things to know today: Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2015

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:

1. WHAT INFLUENCES ACTIONS AT UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI

Emboldened by last year’s protests in Ferguson, students at the Columbia campus take action after racially charged incidents, leading to the resignations of two top leaders and the promise of changes.

2. OPPOSITION IN MYANMAR RAISES CONCERNS OVER OFFICIAL RELEASE OF RESULTS

Aung San Suu Kyi’s party accuses the government of intentionally delaying the announcement of the polls outcome, saying it wants to “maybe play a trick.”

3. WHO WILL FACE NEW SCRUTINY DURING FOURTH GOP DEBATE

It’s unlikely Ben Carson will be able to shrink into the background Tuesday when the eight leading Republican candidates take the stage in Milwaukee.

4. HOW EGYPTIAN MEDIA PAINT RUSSIAN PLANE INVESTIGATION

Fury is at the fore, alleging the country is facing a Western conspiracy to undermine it and crush the tourism industry, as the U.S. and Britain increasingly point to a bomb as the cause of the crash.

5. DENIALS, CONSPIRACY CLAIMS AS RUSSIA REACTS TO DOPING CRISIS

Most of the country’s major dailies follow the government’s lead in playing down the accusations from the World Anti-Doping Agency commission.

6. CALAIS OFFERS MIGRANTS SCHOOL, LIBRARY, BARS IN SHACKS

Stuck in a muddy dead end, residents of the camp pass the time reading, drinking and learning English.

7. SYRIA’S SWIMMING SISTERS FIND NEW HOME IN GERMAN WATERS

Two months ago Sarah and Ysra Mardini were on an inflatable boat carrying refugees to Greece – now they are ploughing down the length of a pool built for the 1936 Olympics in Berlin.

8. CUT, CUT, COWER

Paul Ryan says lawmakers won’t shy from difficult choices – but several recent votes demonstrate Congress’ tendency to reverse course at the first tingle of political pain.

9. NASA, PARTNERS TRACK RAIN, SNOW IN SOGGY WASHINGTON

They are trying to measure raindrops and snowdrops in an effort to study how well global satellites predict precipitation from space.

10. ACTIVISTS SAY ENDING SEAWORLD ORCA SHOWS NOT ENOUGH

They say the company should phase out its captivity of killer whales altogether.

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