Friday, October 2, 2009

Movies: Gervais Makes Lies Hilarious, Michael Moore Exposes Them

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Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Inauguration Central from washingtonpost.com

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Monday, January 5, 2009

washingtonpost.com: Today's Headlines & Columnists

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Monday, January 05, 2009

TODAY'S HIGHLIGHTS
Commerce Pick Richardson Withdraws, Citing N.M. Probe
New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, chosen by President-elect Barack Obama to be commerce secretary, withdrew from consideration yesterday, citing an ongoing federal "pay-to-play" investigation involving one of his political donors as a significant obstacle to his confirmation.
(By Michael D. Shear and Carol D. Leonnig, The Washington Post)

Kaine Poised To Chair The DNC
Va. Governor to Hold Position Part Time In Last Year in Office
(By Michael D. Shear, The Washington Post)

Israeli Forces Push Deeper Into Gaza Strip
International Critics Warn of Worsening Humanitarian Crisis
(By Sudarsan Raghavan, The Washington Post)

Residents Doubt That Rocket Fire Can Be Stopped
(By Griff Witte, The Washington Post)

Rhee Plans Shake-Up of Teaching Staff, Training
Career Development Would Change for Those Who Remain
(By Bill Turque, The Washington Post)

More Today's Highlights

POLITICS
Kaine Poised To Chair The DNC
Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine will become chairman of the Democratic National Committee later this month, serving as the top political messenger for Barack Obama's administration even while finishing his final year in the governor's mansion, several sources said.
(By Michael D. Shear, The Washington Post)

Commerce Pick Richardson Withdraws, Citing N.M. Probe
(By Michael D. Shear and Carol D. Leonnig, The Washington Post)

Reid Stands by Decision to Block Burris
Majority Leader Says Senate Appointment Is Tainted by Illinois Scandal but 'Anything Can Happen'
(By Shailagh Murray, The Washington Post)

Pentagon Chief Sees Opportunities In Russia and the War on Terrorism
(By Walter Pincus, The Washington Post)

Franken Looks Like a Winner, but Not Quite a Senator
(By Chris Cillizza And Paul Kane, The Washington Post)

More Politics

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NATION
Kaine Poised To Chair The DNC
Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine will become chairman of the Democratic National Committee later this month, serving as the top political messenger for Barack Obama's administration even while finishing his final year in the governor's mansion, several sources said.
(By Michael D. Shear, The Washington Post)

Top Democrats Give Longer Timetable for Stimulus Bill
(By Shailagh Murray, The Washington Post)

Obama Arrives in Style
Crowds Greet President-Elect at Hotel; Daughters Begin School
(By William Wan and Nikita Stewart, The Washington Post)

More Nation

WORLD
Israeli Forces Push Deeper Into Gaza Strip
JERUSALEM, Jan. 4 -- Israeli ground forces backed by air and naval power pushed deeper into the Gaza Strip on Sunday, engaging in fierce combat with Hamas fighters as they attempted to encircle the coastal region's largest city.
(By Sudarsan Raghavan, The Washington Post)

Curbing Population Via Call Center
Agents Address Family-Planning Concerns in India
(By Rama Lakshmi, The Washington Post)

Bring Rifles and Books: College on a U.S. Base in Baghdad
__
(By Ernesto Londoño and Susan Kinzie, The Washington Post)

Bomber Kills 40 at Shiite Shrine in Baghdad
(By Anthony Shadid, The Washington Post)

Residents Doubt That Rocket Fire Can Be Stopped
(By Griff Witte, The Washington Post)

More World

METRO
Rhee Plans Shake-Up of Teaching Staff, Training
At the heart of Chancellor Michelle A. Rhee's vision for transforming D.C. schools is a dramatic overhaul of its 4,000-member teacher corps that would remove a "significant share" of instructors and launch an ambitious plan to foster professional growth for those who remain.
(By Bill Turque, The Washington Post)

Planners Look to Pax River as Guide Ahead of Military Base Expansions
(By Ashley Halsey III, The Washington Post)

Obama Arrives in Style
Crowds Greet President-Elect at Hotel; Daughters Begin School
(By William Wan and Nikita Stewart, The Washington Post)

Kaine Poised To Chair The DNC
Va. Governor to Hold Position Part Time In Last Year in Office
(By Michael D. Shear, The Washington Post)

Inauguration Spotlights Cellphone Opportunities
(By Kim Hart, The Washington Post)

More Metro

BUSINESS
Commerce Pick Richardson Withdraws, Citing N.M. Probe
New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, chosen by President-elect Barack Obama to be commerce secretary, withdrew from consideration yesterday, citing an ongoing federal "pay-to-play" investigation involving one of his political donors as a significant obstacle to his confirmation.
(By Michael D. Shear and Carol D. Leonnig, The Washington Post)

Top Democrats Give Longer Timetable for Stimulus Bill
(By Shailagh Murray, The Washington Post)

D.C.'s Kinetic Tech Czar
Mixing a Start-Up Mentality With a Whirlwind Approach
(By Kim Hart, The Washington Post)

Cocktail Kings Shake Up Bar Business
(By Thomas Heath, The Washington Post)

Inauguration Spotlights Cellphone Opportunities
(By Kim Hart, The Washington Post)

More Business

TECHNOLOGY
D.C.'s Kinetic Tech Czar
In his first meeting of a recent day, Vivek Kundra stood in front of a large monitor, grilling employees about the status of projects to revamp technology in Washington's schools, police cars, jails and health clinics.
(By Kim Hart, The Washington Post)

Inauguration Spotlights Cellphone Opportunities
(By Kim Hart, The Washington Post)

Fox Business's 'Bell' Sounds A New Start For Liz Claman
(By Howard Kurtz, The Washington Post)

Curbing Population Via Call Center
Agents Address Family-Planning Concerns in India
(By Rama Lakshmi, The Washington Post)

More Technology

SPORTS
Vonn Tumbles, and Pays the Price in World Cup Standings
With the finish and the victory in sight, Lindsey Vonn made a costly error.
(The Washington Post)

Pacers' Dunleavy Eyeing His Return
(The Washington Post)

Hokies Are Run Over by the Blue Devils
Duke 69, Virginia Tech 44
(By Zach Berman, The Washington Post)

2 Minute Drill
(The Washington Post)

After a Tough Loss, Hoyas Must Regroup Quickly
(By Liz Clarke, The Washington Post)

More Sports

STYLE
CAROLYN HAX
Adapted from a recent online discussion. Dear Carolyn: My new girlfriend has a big scar on her chest from childhood heart surgery. When I introduced her to my family, my sister, who is a pretty accomplished TV makeup artist, offered her some tips on how to camouflage the scar using a certain type...
(By Carolyn Hax, The Washington Post)

CHESS
(By Lubomir Kavalek, The Washington Post)

EVER WONDERED . . . what 'wind chill' is?
(The Washington Post)

ASK AMY
(The Washington Post)

Make a Date
(The Washington Post)

More Style

LIVE DISCUSSIONS
NFL News Feed, Playoff Edition
Washington Post NFL columnist and NFL News Feed blogger Mark Maske takes your questions and comments about the first round of the playoffs and all the latest news from around the league.
(Mark Maske, washingtonpost.com)

Talk About Travel
(The Flight Crew, washingtonpost.com)

The Chat House with Michael Wilbon
Sports News
(Michael Wilbon, washingtonpost.com)

Outlook: Will the Future be Bright or Bleak?
Sci-fi films diverge in their answers to that question
(Annalee Newitz, washingtonpost.com)

D.C. Council Begins New Session
(Vincent C. Gray, washingtonpost.com)

More Live Discussions


Mr. Richardson Withdraws
A campaign finance controversy sinks a Cabinet nominee.
(The Washington Post)

Saving D.C. Services
In making needed budget cuts, the mayor and the council should try to protect the poor.
(The Washington Post)


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Wednesday, July 30, 2008

washingtonpost.com News: Trade Talks Crumble in Feud Over Farm Aid

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Wednesday, July 30, 2008

TODAY'S HIGHLIGHTS
Trade Talks Crumble in Feud Over Farm Aid
International talks aimed at ushering in a new era of free trade collapsed in Geneva yesterday during a bitter split between developed and developing countries over the future shape of global commerce.
(By Anthony Faiola and Rama Lakshmi, The Washington Post)

Karadzic Extradited to The Hague to Face War Crimes Charges
Transfer to Tribunal Comes After Rally by Thousands of Backers
(By Peter Finn, The Washington Post)

For GOP, Stevens Indictment Is Latest in a String of Setbacks
(By Chris Cillizza and Paul Kane, The Washington Post)

McCain Charge Against Obama Lacks Evidence
(By Michael D. Shear and Dan Balz, The Washington Post)

President Obama Continues Hectic Victory Tour
(By Dana Milbank, The Washington Post)

More Today's Highlights

POLITICS
Sen. Stevens Indicted On 7 Corruption Counts
Alaska's Ted Stevens, the longest-serving Republican senator in U.S. history, was indicted yesterday on seven charges of making false statements about more than $250,000 that corporate executives doled out to overhaul his Anchorage area house.
(By Carrie Johnson and Paul Kane, The Washington Post)

House Issues An Apology For Slavery
(By Darryl Fears, The Washington Post)

For Obama, a Day Of Monetary Meetings
(The Washington Post)

Democrats Urge Head Of EPA To Resign
(The Washington Post)

More Politics

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NATION
Efforts Against AIDS Among Black Americans Criticized
A prominent AIDS organization accused the federal government yesterday of doing too little to fight AIDS among black Americans, in whom the size and scope of the epidemic resembles that seen in many African nations.
(By David Brown, The Washington Post)

Strategy Against Al-Qaeda Faulted
Report Says Effort Is Not a 'War'
(By Joby Warrick, The Washington Post)

McCain Charge Against Obama Lacks Evidence
(By Michael D. Shear and Dan Balz, The Washington Post)

Bush Tells Chinese Dissidents He Will Push Beijing to Make Reforms
(By Dan Eggen, The Washington Post)

Sen. Stevens Indicted On 7 Corruption Counts
Longest-Serving GOP Senator Is Accused of Making False Statements About Money From Alaska Oil Firm
(By Carrie Johnson and Paul Kane, The Washington Post)

More Nation

WORLD
Chinese Officials Give Club District A Brusque Cleanup
BEIJING -- Ryan Horne loves living in China. He arrived in March from Los Angeles to manage the opening of a club in the heart of the city's night-life district. Drawn by the promise of wealthy investors and an ultra-creative founder, Horne set about trying to shape the "it" factor in Beijing, that...
(By Jill Drew, The Washington Post)

Mexico's Drug Cartels Take Barbarous Turn: Targeting Bystanders
In Sinaloa, Carnage Brings Widespread Terror
(By Manuel Roig-Franzia, The Washington Post)

Sunni Insurgents Targeted in Diyala Province
Iraqi-Led Offensive in Volatile Region Near Baghdad Also Takes Aim at Smugglers, Shiite Militias
(By Sudarsan Raghavan, The Washington Post)

For GOP, Stevens Indictment Is Latest in a String of Setbacks
(By Chris Cillizza and Paul Kane, The Washington Post)

Karadzic Extradited to The Hague to Face War Crimes Charges
Transfer to Tribunal Comes After Rally by Thousands of Backers
(By Peter Finn, The Washington Post)

More World

METRO
Death of NE Girl, 12, Is Probed as Homicide
A 12-year-old girl was found dead with possible stab wounds yesterday in a Northeast Washington apartment, a D.C. police source said. Authorities labeled the case a suspicious death and said they are treating it as a homicide.
(By Paul Duggan and Clarence Williams, The Washington Post)

Driver Who Hit Crowd, Killing 8, Is Charged
2 Waldorf Men Now Believed Involved in 2nd Street Race
(By Ruben Castaneda and Avis Thomas-Lester, The Washington Post)

Libraries In D.C. Plan Cuts In Hours
Budget Shortfall Would Also Close Kiosks
(By Elissa Silverman, The Washington Post)

Boy, 13, Dies After Being Hit by Car
(By Martin Weil, The Washington Post)

Outburst of Gun Violence Claims Four Lives in D.C.
(By Debbi Wilgoren and Paul Duggan, The Washington Post)

More Metro

BUSINESS
Slow to Pick Up The Pepper Trail
Just after the Fourth of July, Cheryl Grubbs called her local health department in Cortez, Colo., to report that her husband had nearly lost his only kidney to a salmonella infection after eating several raw jalapeños and a sandwich with a tomato in it during a camping trip.
(By Annys Shin, The Washington Post)

Children Targets of $1.6 Billion in Food Ads
FTC Discloses 2006 Spending in First-Ever Report
(By Kendra Marr, The Washington Post)

Trade Talks Crumble in Feud Over Farm Aid
(By Anthony Faiola and Rama Lakshmi, The Washington Post)

Chinese Officials Give Club District A Brusque Cleanup
(By Jill Drew, The Washington Post)

Shares Soar As Oil Hits 7-Week Low
Monday's Losses Recouped Despite Drop in Home Prices
(By Dina ElBoghdady, The Washington Post)

More Business

TECHNOLOGY
Sprint Loses Early-Termination Fee Case in Calif.
Sprint Nextel was wrong to charge customers penalty fees of $73 million for early termination of cell phone contracts, a California court ruled yesterday, offering encouragement to customers of other companies who have filed similar suits around the nation.
(By Cecilia Kang, The Washington Post)

Game Over: Suit Spells the End For Facebook's Scrabulous App
(By Mike Musgrove, The Washington Post)

Comcast Illegally Interfered With Web File-Sharing Traffic, FCC Says
(By Cecilia Kang, The Washington Post)

More Technology

SPORTS
Two Runs Too Much For Nats
The Washington Nationals' football-shaped locker room turns in on itself. Every chair points toward the center. From where rookie Collin Balester stood last night, in front of his locker and surrounded by reporters, he could have looked at the culprits of his demise.
(By Mark Viera, The Washington Post)

On Favre, Packers Can't Have It Both Ways
(By Michael Wilbon, The Washington Post)

Action Vets Rally Around Auto Circuit
(By Andrew Astleford, The Washington Post)

A Key Cog Gets Back In Working Order
Redskins' Rogers Follows Gradual Process in Recovery From Knee Surgery
(By Jason Reid, The Washington Post)

Congressional Hears Pitch From Woods
(The Washington Post)

More Sports

STYLE
Surviving The Free Fall
CHICAGO Patti Solis Doyle has come home to get her house in order and her reputation back. It has not been a good year.
(By Lois Romano, The Washington Post)

The Reliable Source
(By Amy Argetsinger and Roxanne Roberts, The Washington Post)

Capturing Bin Laden On Camera
At Guantanamo Trial, Former ABC Reporter Recounts 1998 Interview
(By Jerry Markon, The Washington Post)

On 'Long Way Down,' a Ride Full of Highs
(By Tom Shales, The Washington Post)

Foraging for Dinner on Amish Back Roads
(By Walter Nicholls, The Washington Post)

More Style

LIVE DISCUSSIONS
Washington Nationals
Washington Post writer Chico Harlan takes your questions and comments about the Washington Nationals.
(Chico Harlan, washingtonpost.com)

Dirda on Books
(Michael Dirda, washingtonpost.com)

White House Watch
(Dan Froomkin, washingtonpost.com)

Free Range on Food
Dish With the Experts
(The Food Section, washingtonpost.com)

The Root: The M Word
The M Word: The Audacity of Taupe
(David Swerdlick, washingtonpost.com)

More Live Discussions


Doha's Demise
TO THE LITANY of recent sour economic news add this unhappy bulletin from Geneva: The global trade negotiations known as the Doha Round broke up yesterday without an agreement. Instead of a new international plan to cut tariffs, which would have boosted economic growth worldwide, members of the W...
(The Washington Post)

Olympic Reprieve
Iraq is allowed to send two athletes to the Beijing Games by a bureaucracy that singled it out for punishment.
(The Washington Post)

Mr. Stevens's Extreme Makeover
He got a garage, a deck, a grill -- and a seven-count indictment alleging he failed to report them.
(The Washington Post)


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Tuesday, July 29, 2008

washingtonpost.com News: Lawmakers Agree to Ban Toxins in Children's Items

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Tuesday, July 29, 2008

TODAY'S HIGHLIGHTS
Lawmakers Agree to Ban Toxins in Children's Items
Congressional negotiators agreed yesterday to a ban on a family of toxins found in children's products, handing a major victory to parents and health experts who have been clamoring for the government to remove harmful chemicals from toys.
(By Lyndsey Layton, The Washington Post)

Calif. Field Goes from Rush To Reflection of Global Limits
(By Steven Mufson, The Washington Post)

Kaine in 'Serious' Talks With Obama
(By Michael D. Shear and Shailagh Murray, The Washington Post)

Internal Justice Dept. Report Cites Illegal Hiring Practices
(By Carrie Johnson, The Washington Post)

Four Women Kill Dozens In Suicide Blasts in Iraq
Kurdish Protest Hit in Kirkuk; Shiites Targeted in Baghdad
(By Sudarsan Raghavan, The Washington Post)

More Today's Highlights

POLITICS
Internal Justice Dept. Report Cites Illegal Hiring Practices
For nearly two years, a young political aide sought to cultivate a "farm system" for Republicans at the Justice Department, hiring scores of prosecutors and immigration judges who espoused conservative priorities and Christian lifestyle choices.
(By Carrie Johnson, The Washington Post)

Kaine in 'Serious' Talks With Obama
(By Michael D. Shear and Shailagh Murray, The Washington Post)

Lawmakers Agree to Ban Toxins in Children's Items
(By Lyndsey Layton, The Washington Post)

Sen. Reid Thwarted On Bundle Of Bills
GOP Sides With Coburn on Spending
(By Paul Kane, The Washington Post)

Record $482 Billion '09 Deficit Forecast
Next President's Options May Be Limited
(By Jonathan Weisman, The Washington Post)

More Politics

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NATION
Lawmakers Agree to Ban Toxins in Children's Items
Congressional negotiators agreed yesterday to a ban on a family of toxins found in children's products, handing a major victory to parents and health experts who have been clamoring for the government to remove harmful chemicals from toys.
(By Lyndsey Layton, The Washington Post)

Record $482 Billion '09 Deficit Forecast
Next President's Options May Be Limited
(By Jonathan Weisman, The Washington Post)

Rampage Attributed to Hatred of Liberalism
Police Say Suspect in Tennessee Church Killings Left Note in His Car
(By Duncan Mansfield, The Washington Post)

Mother Ship Unveiled for $200,000 Place in Space
(By Karl Vick, The Washington Post)

DHS Urges Vigilance Over Next 12 Months
Vulnerability to Terror Seen in Big Events
(By Spencer S. Hsu, The Washington Post)

More Nation

WORLD
Four Women Kill Dozens In Suicide Blasts in Iraq
BAGHDAD, July 28 -- Wearing their flowing black garments, they can carry hidden explosives past most checkpoints because customs of modesty prevent male guards from frisking them. On Monday, four female suicide bombers in two Iraqi cities used this tactic to enter areas defended by hundreds of...
(By Sudarsan Raghavan, The Washington Post)

Plagued by Terrorism, Indians Voice Frustration
(By Emily Wax, The Washington Post)

Push to Rebuild Brings Protest in Georgia's Capital
(By Tara Bahrampour, The Washington Post)

Moving Past Life as a Rebel Slave
Young Ugandan Woman Cares for Daughter Born in Captivity
(By Ben de la Cruz, The Washington Post)

Turks Mourn Blast Victims; Rebels Deny Culpability
(By Christopher Torchia, The Washington Post)

More World

METRO
Area Food Pantries Try To Watch What They Mete
It was the maraschino cherries that did it. "Are you trying to kill me?" the woman asked Ted Pringle, director of food and clothing for Bread for the City, the District's largest food pantry. "I'm a diabetic. I can't have these."
(By Lori Aratani, The Washington Post)

Panel Hears of Inequities in Death Penalty
Unabomber's Brother Is Among Witnesses Before Md. Commission
(By John Wagner, The Washington Post)

D.C. Is Sued Again Over Handgun Rules
(By Del Quentin Wilber and Paul Duggan, The Washington Post)

Barbs Traded on Va. Voter Drives
(By Tim Craig, The Washington Post)

Judge Orders New Trial in Toddler's Slaying
(By Tom Jackman, The Washington Post)

More Metro

BUSINESS
Treasury, Banks Promote 'Covered Bonds'
The nation's top financial regulators and four of its largest banks announced plans yesterday to expand a method for financing mortgages, called "covered bonds," in an effort to reinvigorate the frozen housing market.
(By David Cho, The Washington Post)

Air Travel Failings Exposed Again by Weekend Storms
(By Sholnn Freeman, The Washington Post)

Calif. Field Goes from Rush To Reflection of Global Limits
(By Steven Mufson, The Washington Post)

Record $482 Billion '09 Deficit Forecast
Next President's Options May Be Limited
(By Jonathan Weisman, The Washington Post)

Area Food Pantries Try To Watch What They Mete
(By Lori Aratani, The Washington Post)

More Business

TECHNOLOGY
Digital TV Budget Sufficient, NTIA Says
In response to criticism from key lawmakers, the federal agency in charge of preparing viewers for the switch to digital television said it has enough money to meet consumer demand.
(By Kim Hart, The Washington Post)

Mother Ship Unveiled for $200,000 Place in Space
(By Karl Vick, The Washington Post)

Clay Whitehead, 69; Changed TV Landscape
(By Adam Bernstein, The Washington Post)

More Technology

SPORTS
A Pair of Punters Vie To Be the Guy
Veteran Derrick Frost and square-jawed newcomer Durant Brooks are engaged in a battle to be the Redskins' punter ¿ a zero sum game in which one stays, one goes.
(By Mike Wise, The Washington Post)

Injuries Force P. Hamm To Quit
(By Liz Clarke, The Washington Post)

Cordero Confident He Can Reach His Way Back
(By Chico Harlan, The Washington Post)

Inspired by Grandfather, Toler Battles to Win Job
(By Mark Viera, The Washington Post)

U.S. Hoops Team Arrives In China
(The Washington Post)

More Sports

STYLE
Singing and Zinging
How low can you sink and still achieve nirvana? You can find the answer in "Jerry Springer: The Opera," which, in Studio Theatre's thrillingly down-and-dirty production, brings an audience to something like a state of musical-theater bliss.
(By Peter Marks, The Washington Post)

The Reliable Source
(By Amy Argetsinger and Roxanne Roberts, The Washington Post)

The Extreme Reality Makeover Show
(By Hank Stuever, The Washington Post)

Robert Novak In Hospital for A Brain Tumor
(By Howard Kurtz, The Washington Post)

Hip-Hop Legends Rock On With Old-School Vibe
(By Sarah Godfrey, The Washington Post)

More Style

LIVE DISCUSSIONS
Book World: 'A Path Out Of The Desert'
Foreign policy expert Kenneth Pollack discusses his new book 'A Path Out of the Desert,' its recommendations for U.S. strategy in the Middle East and how and why he changed his mind about the war in Iraq.
(Kenneth M. Pollack, washingtonpost.com)

Girl Talk/Gregg Gillis On New Album, Music Industry
(Gregg Gillis, washingtonpost.com)

Freedom Rock
(J. Freedom du Lac, washingtonpost.com)

Science and Medicine: Bacteria
(David Brown, washingtonpost.com)

Station Break
Today's Pop Culture
(Paul Farhi, washingtonpost.com)

More Live Discussions


Justice Besmirched
THE LATIN phrase on the seal of the Justice Department loosely means "he who prosecutes on behalf of justice." During the reign of Monica Goodling and D. Kyle Sampson it also should have read, "Democrats need not apply."
(The Washington Post)

Zimbabwe's Talks
Robert Mugabe's campaign to stay in power continues by other means.
(The Washington Post)

Mr. Novak Takes Leave
Leaving a hole on our op-ed page
(The Washington Post)


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