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This archive only contains stories older than 14 days. To search stories from the most recent 14-day period, use our main search page. Searching and reading articles from the past two weeks is free.

Your search for john and bates and attorney OR starr returned 100 article(s), listed below, out of 276 matching your terms.

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INCUMBENT DELEGATES WAITING FOR CHALLENGERS TO APPEAR

Article 101 of 276 found

By John Ward Anderson, Steve Bates and Evelyn Hsu
Thursday, May 30, 1991 ; Page V06
Section: WEEKLY - VIRGINIA
Article ID: 9105300084 -- 765 words

The power of being an incumbent politician is once again proving itself in Northern Virginia, where a slew of Democratic and Republican members of the House of Delegates are facing the happy prospect of a free ride back to Richmond in the November elections.

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PURCELLVILLE ANNEXATION SEEN AS MEANS TO HIGHER-DENSITY ZONING

Article 102 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, May 30, 1991 ; Page C03
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9105300012 -- 655 words

Several Loudoun County landowners, in a highly unusual request, are asking that their property be annexed into the Town of Purcellville, a move that would free them from county restrictions on development.

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COURT INVALIDATES AIRPORT AGENCY

RULING CLOUDS DULLES, NATIONAL PLANS

Article 103 of 276 found

By Steve Bates and Ruth Marcus
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, June 18, 1991 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9106180087 -- 820 words

The Supreme Court yesterday struck down legislation setting up the authority that operates National and Dulles International airports, stripping the regional body of its power to raise and spend money for major improvements planned at both facilities.

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MR. VALENTI STAYS IN WASHINGTON

Article 104 of 276 found

By Charles Trueheart
Sunday, July 14, 1991 ; Page W10
Section: MAGAZINE
Article ID: 9107140089 -- 7879 words

It's a grand spring evening, balmy and fine, so they've moved things outside to the patio along 16th Street, just across Lafayette Square from the White House. "We've never done this before," says Jack Valenti proudly as he strides along toward his guests, knotted around an outdoor bar.

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METRO LAGS ON SAFETY DEVICE

TESTING IS DELAYED ON PLATE PREVENTING ESCALATOR INJURIES

Article 105 of 276 found

By Stephen C. Fehr
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, July 14, 1991 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9107140143 -- 1313 words

Metro officials have known for five years about a safety device used in other subway systems that helps prevent riders from getting caught in escalators, but have not followed an internal recommendation to test it, according to transit agency records and interviews.

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U.S. BACKS REVAMPED VA. DISTRICTS

12 HOUSE SEATS REPRESENT MAJORITY-BLACK AREAS

Article 106 of 276 found

By John F. Harris
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, July 24, 1991 ; Page C01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9107240059 -- 541 words

RICHMOND, JULY 23 -- The redistricting plan passed last week by the Virginia House of Delegates won approval today from the U.S. Justice Department, after legislators agreed to demands that black voters be given more representation.

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GORBACHEV'S OUSTER HITS HOME

AREA RESIDENTS FEAR FOR GORBACHEV, HIS COUNTRY

Article 107 of 276 found

By Steve Twomey
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, August 20, 1991 ; Page B01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9108200131 -- 1296 words

Often yesterday, she would gaze from her beauty shop to the spot at 15th Street and New York Avenue NW where a limousine suddenly stopped last year and a famous man emerged, buttoning his suit coat. She had wiped her hands on a towel and raced out to touch him, she said, seeing something in his eyes.

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CANDIDATES GALORE, BUT VOTERS SCARCE

12 SEEK GOP NOMINATIONS IN SUPERVISOR CONTESTS

Article 108 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, August 22, 1991 ; Page V01
Section: WEEKLY - VIRGINIA
Article ID: 9108220099 -- 949 words

With spirited contests for four Republican nominations to Board of Supervisors seats and with four uncontested nominees, the GOP is hoping to assemble a slate that will capture a majority of the nine board seats up for grabs this fall. The new supervisors will begin four-year terms in January.

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D.C. MAY BAR OFF-CAMPUS LUNCHES

POLICE INCREASE SCHOOL-AREA PATROLS 2 HELD IN SHOOTING NEAR DUNBAR

Article 109 of 276 found

By Tracy Thompson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, September 7, 1991 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9109070042 -- 1318 words

D.C. school officials are considering a ban on the traditional right of high school students to leave their campuses for lunch, after a shooting near Dunbar High School on Thursday.

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FOR STUDIOS, OSCAR FEVER

CHRISTMAS IS A-COMING AND THE FLICKS ARE GETTING FAT

Article 110 of 276 found

By Hal Hinson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, September 8, 1991 ; Page G15
Section: SHOW
Article ID: 9109080013 -- 909 words

The fall season is the no-man's land of the movie business, the valley between the twin commercial peaks of summer and Christmas. If you're a movie executive, summer is the time to line your pockets; it's a cash grab, a time for comedies and action pictures, for gargantuan budgets, karate chops and dumb yuks. Forget about prestige, forget about quality. Think market share. Think "Naked Gun." Think Arnold. Or better yet, don't think at all.

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VA. CLAMPING LID ON TIP JAR GAMBLING

LOTTERY-STYLE GAMES ARE A TRADITIONAL CHARITY FUND-RAISING TOOL IN FRATERNAL CLUBS

Article 111 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, September 10, 1991 ; Page B03
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9109100090 -- 869 words

The dimly lit, wood-paneled Purcellville American Legion club in western Loudoun County is a slice of Americana: Walls are lined with flags and video games. Pool tables and shuffleboard games sit on ancient linoleum. At the large wooden bar, members and friends can meet for a beer, watch a ball game, swap stories -- and pull tickets out of a "tip jar" to win cash prizes.

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JUDGES REJECT REMAP PLEA BY VA. GOP

Article 112 of 276 found

By John F. Harris
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, September 11, 1991 ; Page D03
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9109110027 -- 442 words

RICHMOND, SEPT. 10 -- A panel of federal judges rejected a plea today by Virginia Republicans to throw out the recent House of Delegates redistricting plan, which the GOP complained was unfair to its incumbents.

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A LOOK INTO THE FUTURE

RESIDENTS, DEVELOPERS JOIN IN LOVETTSVILLE

Article 113 of 276 found

By Robert O'Harrow Jr.
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, September 12, 1991 ; Page V01
Section: WEEKLY - VIRGINIA
Article ID: 9109120150 -- 745 words

An unusual effort by residents, landowners and developers to help shape the future of the Town of Lovettsville and areas nearby is drawing to a close this month.

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HIGHEST VA. COURT WEIGHS FAIRFAX DOWNZONING

Article 114 of 276 found

By Steve Bates and Peter Baker
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, September 18, 1991 ; Page C01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9109180016 -- 797 words

Audrey Moore and Thomas M. Davis III have a bet: If the Virginia Supreme Court upholds Fairfax County's 1989 attempt to reduce zoning on 14,000 acres, Moore wins $100. If not, Davis takes home the cash.

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18 CANDIDATES SEEK EIGHT SEATS:TAXES, EDUCATION KEY ISSUES IN VOTE THAT WILL REMAKE BOARD

Article 115 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, October 24, 1991 ; Page V01
Section: WEEKLY - VIRGINIA
Article ID: 9110240204 -- 2342 words

Taxes and education are the big issues in Loudoun County as 18 candidates vie for eight seats on the county Board of Supervisors.

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TWO VETERAN POLITICIANS SEEK NEW HOUSE SEAT IN 32ND DISTRICT

Article 116 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, October 24, 1991 ; Page V17
Section: WEEKLY - VIRGINIA
Article ID: 9110240238 -- 842 words

Two Loudoun County political heavyweights, former county Republican chairman William Mims and Board of Supervisors Chairman Betty W. Tatum (D), have squared off frequently in recent years over county board policies. The two now are going head to head again, this time on the hustings for the 32nd District House of Delegates seat.

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LOUDOUN

BARTON CLAIMS CHAIRMANSHIP AS GOP TAKES BOARD MAJORITY

Article 117 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, November 6, 1991 ; Page A30
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9111060154 -- 718 words

Republicans captured seven of nine seats on the Loudoun Board of Supervisors yesterday in a resounding display of voter dissatisfaction with the Democrat-dominated board. Led by Chairman-elect George Barton, of Hamilton, the GOP gained its first board majority in modern history.

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IT CAN'T GET ANY CLOSER

VA. HOUSE RIVALS POLL IDENTICAL VOTES

Article 118 of 276 found

By Mary Jordan
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, November 7, 1991 ; Page D06
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9111070211 -- 490 words

Early yesterday morning when the last vote was counted, two opponents battling to represent Charlottesville in the House of Delegates still did not know which one would be going to Richmond.

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MD. CANDIDATES RUSH TO BEAT FILING DEADLINE

Article 119 of 276 found

By Michele L. Norris
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, December 24, 1991 ; Page B01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9112240047 -- 892 words

Maryland's new majority-black congressional district in the Washington suburbs attracted 22 candidates by yesterday's deadline to file for the March 3 primary, as a federal court dismissed a challenge to the state's redrawn district lines.

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WITH 21 CANDIDATES, MD.'S 4TH DISTRICT RACE IS A MARATHON

Article 120 of 276 found

By Michele L. Norris
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, December 30, 1991 ; Page B03
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9112300043 -- 1377 words

The new majority-black congressional seat in Prince George's and Montgomery counties has attracted 21 candidates, creating the most crowded congressional race in the Maryland suburbs in more than three decades.

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DOMESTIC VIOLENCE FUELS RISE IN SUBURBAN SLAYINGS

RECORDS REACHED IN 6 OF 9 JURISDICTIONS

Article 121 of 276 found

By Steve Bates and Paul Duggan
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, January 5, 1992 ; Page B01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9201050087 -- 1100 words

Domestic violence has been a major factor in the unusually high number of slayings in the Washington suburbs, where six of nine police departments report that homicide records were equaled or surpassed in 1991.

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4TH DISTRICT

CROWDED FIELD SCRAMBLES FOR NEW HOUSE SEAT 12 VIE FOR DEMOCRATIC NOD WHILE 6 AIM FOR GOP SPOT

Article 122 of 276 found

By Michele L. Norris
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, February 27, 1992 ; Page M08
Section: WEEKLY - MARYLAND
Article ID: 9202270224 -- 1513 words

With 12 Democrats and six Republicans, the race to represent the new majority-black congressional district that straddles Prince George's and Montgomery counties is the most crowded in the Maryland suburbs in more than three decades.

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AMID ALL THE NOISE, A 'TECHNICIAN'

SHERWIN LANDFIELD'S GROUP WOULD LIKE TO CLOSE NATIONAL AIRPORT

Article 123 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, March 14, 1992 ; Page B01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9203140047 -- 1109 words

This winter, a routine meeting of the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority board was interrupted by the discovery that a huge chandelier was hanging rather precariously over the heads of board members, as if its anchors had been weakened.

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BANK SCANDAL SPURS U.S. CRIMINAL PROBE

STAFF PRACTICES REVIEWED FOR POSSIBLE FRAUD

Article 124 of 276 found

By Michael York and Kenneth J. Cooper
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, March 17, 1992 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9203170031 -- 1337 words

Federal prosecutors are trying to determine whether any criminal laws were violated when 355 current and former House members wrote checks with insufficient funds in their House Bank accounts, a spokesman for U.S. Attorney Jay B. Stephens said yesterday.

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OFF-TRACK BETTING SPURS INTEREST IN VIRGINIA THOROUGHBRED TRACK

Article 125 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, March 22, 1992 ; Page B04
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9203220081 -- 843 words

For more than three years, no one even pretended to be seriously interested in building a thoroughbred horse racing track in Virginia. Now, potential investors are popping up almost daily, combing the countryside for the best track location.

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AMID DENUNCIATIONS, HOUSE PANEL LISTS 22 'ABUSERS' OF CHECK CASHING

Article 126 of 276 found

By Guy Gugliotta
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, April 2, 1992 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9204020119 -- 1392 words

The House ethics committee last night formally released the names of 22 current and former House members described as "abusers" of check-cashing privileges at the defunct House Bank. Those named bitterly denounced the committee for what they said were premature leaks and denial of due process.

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KANSAS CITY'S COSTLY INTEGRATION STRATEGY

RESULTS MIXED IN $1.2 BILLION SCHOOL PLAN

Article 127 of 276 found

By Mary Jordan
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, April 11, 1992 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9204110076 -- 1808 words

KANSAS CITY, MO. -- Instructors at Central High peer through an underwater window noting divers' form as they splash into a new $5 million pool. Upstairs, the former head coach of the Soviet Olympic fencing team parries with sophomores. Down the hall, limber gymnasts aiming for gold medals tumble and train toward perfection.

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LOUDOUN JUDGE STOPS SCHOOL PANEL SHAKEUP

SUPERVISORS WANT TO CREATE GOP MAJORITY

Article 128 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, May 6, 1992 ; Page B07
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9205060029 -- 591 words

A Circuit Court judge yesterday temporarily blocked an effort by Loudoun County supervisors to engineer a Republican takeover of the School Board, agreeing to consider complaints that the supervisors violated state law in trying to add two members to the education panel.

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'CRUEL DOUBT'

MOTHER, SON AND MURDER

Article 129 of 276 found

By Patricia Brennan
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, May 17, 1992 ; Page Y07
Section: TV WEEK
Article ID: 9205170195 -- 1391 words

In July 1988, 19-year-old Christopher Pritchard planned the murders of his stepfather, mother and sister.

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ROBB KNEW OF TAPE EARLY, COURT TOLD

EX-AIDE SAYS SENATOR WAS KEPT INFORMED

Article 130 of 276 found

By Robert F. Howe
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, May 21, 1992 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9205210147 -- 1175 words

NORFOLK, MAY 20 -- Sen. Charles S. Robb (D-Va.) was informed from the beginning about how his staff obtained and later leaked to the media a secretly made tape of a conversation involving Gov. L. Douglas Wilder, Robb's onetime top aide said in court papers filed today.

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UNCERTAIN HOW THEY WILL FARE

UNMETERED D.C. CABS KEEP SOME PASSENGERS FROM NATIONAL AIRPORT GUESSING

Article 131 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, May 31, 1992 ; Page B01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9205310027 -- 1945 words

For frequent travelers John and Diana Parham, it's become a guessing game:

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OREGON BLAZES A TRAIL

DOCTOR/LEGISLATOR JOHN KITZHABER SETS OFF POLITICAL FIREWORKS WITH HIS PLAN TO RATION MEDICAL SERVICES WHILE EXPANDING COVERAGE

Article 132 of 276 found

By Michael Abramowitz
Tuesday, June 9, 1992 ; Page Z12
Section: HEALTH
Article ID: 9206090135 -- 4049 words

SALEM, ORE. -- It all began in the sterile, unremarkable business of state budget-cutting. The time was May 1986. Groping to confront a $35.4 million revenue shortfall, Oregon legislative leaders voted to drop 4,300 state residents from the state's Medicaid program.

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PARENTS KEPT IN DARK ABOUT ALLEGED ABUSE AT DAY-CARE CENTER

Article 133 of 276 found

By Sandra Evans
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, August 16, 1992 ; Page B01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9208160077 -- 942 words

When a social worker came to her home and informed Alkinne Powell that her 4-year-old son may have been physically abused at his Alexandria day-care center, Powell was upset and scared.

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INFANT LEFT IN CAR IS HOSPITALIZED

SITTER APPARENTLY LOST TRACK OF CHILD

Article 134 of 276 found

By Steve Bates and Sandra Evans
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, September 1, 1992 ; Page C01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9209010083 -- 763 words

A Loudoun County infant is in critical condition with brain damage after a babysitter allegedly left him in a closed car for 90 minutes outside her house on a warm afternoon last week, officials said yesterday.

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BRAIN DAMAGE FATAL TO BABY LEFT IN CAR

INQUIRY CONTINUES INTO INCIDENT AT BABYSITTER'S

Article 135 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, September 4, 1992 ; Page D06
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9209040118 -- 540 words

A Loudoun County infant who suffered brain damage after being left in a closed car on a warm afternoon died yesterday at Fairfax Hospital, a hospital spokeswoman said.

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POTOMAC YARD PROJECT IS REVIVED BY RFP

VA. ATTORNEY GENERAL BLASTS LAND'S OWNERS

Article 136 of 276 found

By Robert F. Howe and John F. Harris
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, October 16, 1992 ; Page C03
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9210160119 -- 748 words

With the collapse of the proposal for a Washington Redskins stadium at Potomac Yard, the owners of the land said yesterday they would return to the Alexandria City Council and seek approval of a massive development of shops, homes and offices rejected by the council last spring.

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NFL REPORT

Article 137 of 276 found

By Marc Weiszer
Friday, October 16, 1992 ; Page B09
Section: SPORTS
Article ID: 9210160101 -- 1327 words

Eagles at Redskins

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BYRNE IS FIRST WOMAN FROM VA. IN CONGRESS

WOLF, MORAN WIN DEMOCRAT IS FIRST BLACK

Article 138 of 276 found

By Peter Baker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, November 4, 1992 ; Page A33
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9211040135 -- 1097 words

Virginia voters elected the state's first woman member of Congress yesterday and the first black person to represent the Old Dominion on Capitol Hill in a century.

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JOCKEYING FOR SUB-CABINET POSTS INTENSIFIES

Article 139 of 276 found

By Al Kamen and Ann Devroy
Monday, January 4, 1993 ; Page A19
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9301040107 -- 893 words

Now that President-elect Clinton has chosen his Cabinet, jockeying for the "real" jobs -- at the assistant secretary and deputy levels -- is reaching new heights, or lows, depending on one's point of view.

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POLICE HUNT FOR SUSPECT, MOTIVE IN CIA KILLINGS

Article 140 of 276 found

By Robert O'Harrow Jr. and Bill Miller
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, January 27, 1993 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9301270113 -- 1084 words

Investigators probing Monday's fatal shootings outside the CIA's Langley headquarters yesterday interviewed 3,000 commuters, received hundreds of tips and identified the weapon used as a semiautomatic assault rifle. But police still have no suspect and no motive.

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LARRY ALAN MILLER, 47, DIES

LAWYER, ASSOCIATION MANAGER

Article 141 of 276 found


Thursday, January 28, 1993 ; Page B06
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9301280057 -- 1284 words

Larry Alan Miller, 47, a lawyer and accountant who was an association manager and home restorer, died Jan. 25 at his home in Arlington. He had AIDS.

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AREA HOME VALUES STEADY, HINTING AT END OF DECLINE

Article 142 of 276 found

By Charles W. Hall and Dan Beyers
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, March 7, 1993 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9303070041 -- 1303 words

Residential property values held virtually steady in most Washington area jurisdictions last year, signaling that a two-year decline in home prices may be coming to an end, but a slump in commercial property assessments continues to strap local governments for revenue.

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ELDERLY ABUSE RISES SHARPLY

SURGE IN AREA CASES FUELED BY STRESS, BETTER REPORTING

Article 143 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, March 7, 1993 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9303070043 -- 1267 words

Reports of physical attacks, poor care and other abuse of elderly people are increasing dramatically in the District, Maryland and Virginia, and occurring more often in homes than in institutions, according to a survey of officials.

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MILAN M. VUITCH, 78, DIES

CHALLENGED ABORTION LAWS

Article 144 of 276 found

By Bart Barnes
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, April 10, 1993 ; Page B06
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9304100093 -- 2134 words

Milan M. Vuitch, 78, a physician and outspoken advocate of liberalized abortion laws who was arrested for performing illegal abortions 16 times in Washington, Maryland and Virginia before the U.S. Supreme Court legalized such procedures in 1973, died April 6 at Holy Cross Hospital after a stroke.

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VA. ARREST MADE IN A SPY CASE FROM GREECE

Article 145 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, May 4, 1993 ; Page B01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9305040065 -- 770 words

An American citizen who worked at the U.S. Embassy in Athens has been arrested in Northern Virginia and charged with espionage for passing sensitive military information to Greek officials, U.S. law enforcement authorities said yesterday.

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VA. GOP CANDIDATES FACE OFF OVER 10-YEAR-OLD LEGAL BATTLE

FOE ATTACKS LAWYER'S STANCE IN TEXTBOOK CASE

Article 146 of 276 found

By Donald P. Baker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 2, 1993 ; Page D01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9306020082 -- 1215 words

CHURCH HILL, TENN. -- A decade-old textbook battle between Christian conservatives and the county school board here has become the unlikely focus of a dispute between the two contenders for the Republican nomination for lieutenant governor in Virginia.

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LAWYER DENIES ANY INVOLVEMENT IN SHOOTING

Article 147 of 276 found

By Patricia Davis and Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, June 15, 1993 ; Page C01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9306150088 -- 782 words

A Reston lawyer said in a two-page statement yesterday that he did not kill a Northern Virginia builder who was planning to marry the lawyer's ex-wife and that he is willing to take a polygraph test to prove his innocence.

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APPEALS COURT PANEL REMOVES ANC MEMBER

RULING ON DISPUTED CLEVELAND PARK SEAT COULD LEAD TO SEPTEMBER SPECIAL ELECTION

Article 148 of 276 found

By Paul Duggan
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 17, 1993 ; Page J03
Section: WEEKLY - DISTRICT
Article ID: 9306170099 -- 644 words

A three-judge panel of the D.C. Court of Appeals has removed a three-term incumbent from a disputed Advisory Neighborhood Commission seat in Cleveland Park, setting the stage for a possible special election.

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TO BE PERFECTLY FRANK ...

IN OH-SO-POLITE CANADA, A MAGAZINE THAT DISHES THE DIRT

Article 149 of 276 found

By Charles Trueheart
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, July 5, 1993 ; Page C01
Section: STYLE
Article ID: 9307050018 -- 1670 words

OTTAWA -- These are sad days for Frank, Canada's fortnightly magazine of rumor and satire. Why? Because Brian Mulroney and his wife, Mila, have just left the capital after nine years to make way for a new prime minister. They leave Frank bereft of its most reliable targets, the couple familiarly known to its readers as "vulgar, bone-weary political hack" Byron Muldoon and his "long-suffering shopaholic wife," Imelda.

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JURY FINDS DEFENDANT WAS WRONGED

DAMAGES AGAINST LOUDOUN DEPUTY SET AT $1 IN CIVIL RIGHTS CASE

Article 150 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 9, 1993 ; Page D03
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9307090153 -- 344 words

A jury found yesterday that a Loudoun County deputy sheriff violated the civil rights of a man who was cleared after four years in prison, but jurors awarded the man only $1 of the $20 million he sought.

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FAIRFAX WOMAN GUILTY OF RAPING BOY

PROSECUTORS SAY SWIM COACH HAD 3-YEAR AFFAIR WITH STUDENT, NOW 14

Article 151 of 276 found

By Jane Seaberry and Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, August 12, 1993 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9308120165 -- 791 words

A 24-year-old Fairfax County swim teacher, who prosecutors say had a three-year affair with a former student of hers who is now 14, pleaded guilty yesterday to statutory rape of the boy.

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D.C. CHAIRMAN RACE HITS FINAL LAP IN LOW GEAR

STRATEGISTS DON'T EXPECT BIG SHOW AT POLLS

Article 152 of 276 found

By Rene Sanchez
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, September 12, 1993 ; Page B01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9309120172 -- 1313 words

It is a campaign that began in the wake of one of the District's greatest political tragedies. And it is ending now with many city voters still worried about the void left by the May suicide of D.C. Council Chairman John A. Wilson and deeply uncertain about who should be his successor.

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MD. HORSE-RACING MAN DE FRANCIS THROWING FUND-RAISER FOR TERRY

Article 153 of 276 found

By Steve Bates and John F. Harris
Washington Post Staff Writers
Saturday, October 2, 1993 ; Page B03
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9310020062 -- 554 words

RICHMOND, OCT. 1 -- Maryland horse-racing promoter Joseph A. De Francis, whose Laurel and Pimlico tracks could face competition from a new Virginia track that state officials will select early next year, is throwing a fund-raiser for Democrat Mary Sue Terry's campaign for governor.

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OFF-TRACK BETTING

PARIMUTUEL WAGERING IS RIDING ON 2 VOTES

Article 154 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, October 21, 1993 ; Page V01
Section: WEEKLY - VIRGINIA
Article ID: 9310210191 -- 691 words

Five years after Virginians approved the idea of a horse racetrack with parimutuel wagering, the Nov. 2 votes of two Northern Virginia communities could help determine whether any track ever becomes a reality.

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THE DRAMA OF THE GIFTED VICE PRESIDENT

Article 155 of 276 found

By Katherine Boo
Sunday, November 28, 1993 ; Page W10
Section: MAGAZINE
Article ID: 9311280006 -- 5940 words

In everything they undertake they do well and often excellently; they are admired and envied; they are successful whenever they care to be -- but all to no avail. Behind all this lurks . . . a sense that life has no meaning.

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CLERGYMAN AND EDUCATOR WILLIAM H. BARNES DIES

Article 156 of 276 found


Tuesday, December 14, 1993 ; Page B07
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9312140114 -- 2221 words

William Henry Barnes, 89, a clergyman and educator who retired in 1965 as director of special education at the Receiving Home for Children in Washington, died Dec. 10 at Shadyside Hospital in Pittsburgh of complications related to a stroke.

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SNOWFALL PUSHES MANY TO TAKE A SLIDE

Article 157 of 276 found

By Bill Miller and Tamara Jones
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, December 30, 1993 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9312300116 -- 1443 words

Call it the unofficial winter sport of the nation's capital: ice hooky.

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COURT DENIES REFUNDS TO VA.'S FEDERAL RETIREES

INCOME TAX CASE MAY TAKE 3 MORE YEARS TO RESOLVE

Article 158 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, January 11, 1994 ; Page C01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9401110037 -- 830 words

An Alexandria judge has ruled that Virginia does not have to refund nearly $500 million in income taxes collected on federal pensions, saying the retirees could have protested the tax before paying it.

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ROBB PLAYS UP WOMEN'S SUPPORT

Article 159 of 276 found

By Kent Jenkins
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, January 13, 1994 ; Page V05
Section: WEEKLY - VIRGINIA
Article ID: 9401130205 -- 926 words

Is Sen. Charles S. Robb romancing women voters as he opens his reelection campaign? In less than a week, the usually camera-shy Robb has held two news conferences aimed at boosting his support among women.

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LAWMAKERS CARRYING LOCAL WISH LISTS TO '94 GENERAL ASSEMBLY

N.VA. COUNTIES SEEK MEASURES ON HATE CRIMES, CHILD ABUSE, SEX EDUCATION

Article 160 of 276 found

By Charles W. Hall and Donald P. Baker
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, January 13, 1994 ; Page V01
Section: WEEKLY - VIRGINIA
Article ID: 9401130192 -- 1140 words

Each year, when Northern Virginia's lawmakers journey to Richmond, two topics dominate their discussion: school spending and the region's congested road system.

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STORM LEAVES AREA FROZEN IN PLACE

Article 161 of 276 found

By Nancy Lewis
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, January 19, 1994 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9401190109 -- 2070 words

Arctic winds sweeping through the region yesterday on the heels of the worst ice storm in years created a canopy of crystalline trees and left below it a frozen dance floor across which cars, trucks, buses and people performed.

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THE CRY OF THE ANGRY PACHYDERMS

Article 162 of 276 found

By John F. Harris and Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, January 27, 1994 ; Page V03
Section: WEEKLY - VIRGINIA
Article ID: 9401270145 -- 897 words

These Republicans don't just get mad, they get even -- and they do it in song.Meet the Angry Young Pachyderms, a Richmond area ensemble of conservative activists who were featured during the inaugural festivities of Attorney General James S. Gilmore III. The Pachyderms give traditional right-wing tirades a new twist by putting them to music and lyrics.

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IN THE STATE HOUSE, SOME MISGIVINGS ON MORALITY LAW

Article 163 of 276 found

By Peter Baker and Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, February 10, 1994 ; Page V03
Section: WEEKLY - VIRGINIA
Article ID: 9402100139 -- 932 words

It's known as Virginia's "shotgun statute," and no one has been convicted under it in more than 40 years.

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IT'S TOUGH GOING, BUT LIFE DOESN'T STOP

ICE STORM SHUTS DOWN SCHOOLS, OFFICES, AIRPORTS, MALLS, BUT SOME STILL MUDDLE THROUGH

Article 164 of 276 found

By Lisa Leff
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, February 12, 1994 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9402120063 -- 1423 words

Yesterday was officially canceled.

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NAVY'S HANDLING OF CHEATING CASE DEBATED IN COURT

Article 165 of 276 found


From news services and staff reports
Wednesday, February 23, 1994 ; Page D06
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9402230032 -- 263 words

A federal judge heard arguments yesterday from attorneys for 47 midshipmen at the U.S. Naval Academy who are seeking to stop the Navy from identifying and punishing students implicated in a 1992 cheating scandal.

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ADVERTISING'S LUST HORIZON

FORGET THE SWEDISH BIKINI TEAM. MEN ARE THE SEX OBJECTS IN THE LATEST FROM MADISON AVENUE

Article 166 of 276 found

By Paula Span
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, February 26, 1994 ; Page D01
Section: STYLE
Article ID: 9402260103 -- 1357 words

A fabulous-looking model partially disrobes for a cola commercial while a bunch of office workers watch and drool -- and there's scarcely a peep about the ad's being sexist, tasteless or demeaning.

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SUDDEN PARENT SYNDROME

HOLLYWOOD DISCOVERS THAT FAMILY VALUES ARE MEASURED IN DOLLARS

Article 167 of 276 found

By Desson Howe
Sunday, February 27, 1994 ; Page C03
Section: OUTLOOK
Article ID: 9402270063 -- 1752 words

AS A PARENT, I'm gratified to see that Hollywood characters (who used to have all that single, fancy-free fun on screen) can no longer escape parental responsibility. There is no better illustration of this than Arnold Schwarzenegger's career curve, in which he has evolved from Conan the Barbarian to Kindergarten Cop, and from bad Terminator to good Terminator. In Tinseltown these days, heroes are no longer measured in bionic build, firearm prowess and machismo utterances. Their moral worth is directly c

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GHA ACCUSED OF OVERBILLING GOVERNMENT

HMO DENIES CLAIMS, WILL PAY $12 MILLION

Article 168 of 276 found

By David S. Hilzenrath
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, March 3, 1994 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9403030126 -- 808 words

Group Health Association, the Washington area's oldest health maintenance organization, yesterday agreed to pay $12.6 million to settle claims that it overcharged the government and federal workers for health benefits over the past four years.

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DESPITE NEW LAW, N.VA. IS WARY OF SCHOOL PRAYER

Article 169 of 276 found

By Debbi Wilgoren
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, March 9, 1994 ; Page B01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9403090045 -- 913 words

Northern Virginia students will not be bowing their heads in class or at graduation any time soon, school officials said yesterday, despite the General Assembly's passage of two bills encouraging student-led prayer in public schools.

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P.G. MURDER SUSPECT RELEASED BY MISTAKE TURNS SELF IN, AGAIN

Article 170 of 276 found

By Paul Duggan and Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, May 31, 1994 ; Page D01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9405310113 -- 681 words

A suspect in a double homicide who was mistakenly released from the Prince George's County jail Wednesday surrendered to authorities last night after eluding dozens of law enforcement personnel for several days.

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PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL GROUP TO PAY RECORD FINE

$379 MILLION ASSESSED AFTER GUILTY PLEA IN 3-YEAR FEDERAL PROBE OF FRAUD, KICKBACKS

Article 171 of 276 found

By Pierre Thomas
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 30, 1994 ; Page A12
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9406300116 -- 890 words

A national chain of psychiatric hospitals yesterday agreed to pay an unprecedented $379 million in fines and penalties to settle federal charges that it provided unnecessary treatment to tens of thousands of patients to illegally collect insurance money.

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'I'M DISAPPOINTED AND SAD'

RESTAURATEUR BLINDED IN ATTACK HOPES SUSPECT'S 4TH TRIAL WILL YIELD JUSTICE

Article 172 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, July 23, 1994 ; Page B01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9407230038 -- 817 words

The story is agonizing, but Khai Nguyen has been forced to repeat it many times.

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CONGRESS

CHALLENGERS POSE NO SERIOUS THREAT TO INCUMBENTS

Article 173 of 276 found

By Kent Jenkins Jr.
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, September 14, 1994 ; Page A26
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9409140127 -- 701 words

Maryland's incumbents in the House of Representatives were favored to dispose of long-shot challengers in primary elections yesterday, while Democrats and Republicans chose candidates for the state's only open House seat, representing suburban Baltimore.

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EX-HOSTAGE'S FOI QUEST TAKES A LUDICROUS TURN

Article 174 of 276 found

By Kathleen Day
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, October 3, 1994 ; Page A17
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9410030083 -- 638 words

It could be a skit from "Saturday Night Live."

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PRIVACY FOR TERRORISTS

Article 175 of 276 found

By Kathleen Day
Thursday, October 6, 1994 ; Page A29
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9410060055 -- 267 words

The government will not invoke terrorists' privacy rights to deny a request by former hostage Terry Anderson for documents about his captors, the Justice Department said yesterday.

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VA. SCHOOL COUNSELOR WORKING FROM JAIL CELL

Article 176 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, October 7, 1994 ; Page D01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9410070143 -- 879 words

The role was not exactly new for James E. McClure, the guidance director at T.C. Williams High School. A student was having trouble at the Alexandria school, McClure made a few phone calls, and the problem was quickly resolved.

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ARLINGTON, LOUDOUN, PRINCE WILLIAM

HYNES TAKES SCHOOL BOARD SEAT, WHIPPLE WINS 4TH COUNTY TERM, BOND ISSUES PASS

Article 177 of 276 found

By Steve Bates and Peter Pae
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, November 9, 1994 ; Page A33
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9411090152 -- 600 words

Longtime school activist Mary H. Hynes became Arlington County's first elected School Board member in nearly four decades yesterday, and Democrat Mary Margaret Whipple won her fourth term on the County Board.

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ARLINGTON ELECTS SCHOOL BOARD MEMBER

SNODGRASS LEADS IN LOUDOUN COUNTY RACE

Article 178 of 276 found

By Steve Bates and Peter Pae
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, November 9, 1994 ; Page A33
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9411090137 -- 598 words

For the first time in nearly four decades, Arlington County voters went to the polls yesterday to elect a School Board member, and in other local campaigns picked a County Board member and decided six bond issues totaling nearly $90 million.

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VA. CITIES SEEKING CLOSER COUNTY TIES

FACING RED INK, MORE GOVERNMENTS ARE URGING REGIONAL COOPERATION

Article 179 of 276 found

By Donald P. Baker and Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, November 17, 1994 ; Page C05
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9411170131 -- 745 words

A growing number of local government officials in Virginia, facing a future of red ink, are calling for an overhaul of laws that make the state's 40 independent cities separate from their surrounding counties.

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U.S. ATTORNEY JOINS MOVE TO TOPPLE PYRAMID GAME SWEEPING D.C., SUBURBAN MD.

Article 180 of 276 found

By Toni Locy and Robert O'Harrow Jr.
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, December 9, 1994 ; Page B03
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9412090066 -- 674 words

Federal prosecutors in the District joined the effort to stop the popular pyramid game known as Friends Helping Friends yesterday, asking a judge to force two police officers and others to stop soliciting investors with promises of huge cash payoffs.

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ALEXANDRIA SEEKS TOUGHER LAWS ON PUBLIC DRINKING

VA. LEGISLATURE CALLED UNLIKELY TO EXTEND ARREST POWERS

Article 181 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, December 15, 1994 ; Page V01
Section: WEEKLY - VIRGINIA
Article ID: 9412150089 -- 717 words

The Alexandria Police Department wants the state legislature to give city officers broader powers to arrest people who drink alcohol near schools and homes, but the city's delegation to the General Assembly says the change likely won't happen this year.

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BEYOND THE BELTWAY -- 1994

YOU THOUGHT THINGS WERE STRANGE HERE

Article 182 of 276 found

By Ken Ringle
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, December 29, 1994 ; Page C01
Section: STYLE
Article ID: 9412290031 -- 1850 words

Tired of politics as usual? Tired of politics, period? Take heart, reader: As these gleanings from wire services demonstrate, Beyond the Beltway in 1994, real people were doing real things.

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IN THE OFFICE, THE LIVING IS EASY

THOSE ON THE JOB BETWEEN HOLIDAYS FIND WORKAHOLIC WASHINGTON HAS LIGHTENED UP

Article 183 of 276 found

By Steve Bates and Rajiv Chandrasekaran
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, December 29, 1994 ; Page B01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9412290042 -- 916 words

Marged Harris took a leisurely noontime stroll on the Mall yesterday, checked out the sales at Hecht's and Woodward & Lothrop and penned a few Christmas cards that she had neglected to send by the 25th.

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VIENNA RENTER FINALLY GETS NO-SPRAY ZONE

WOMAN HAD SUFFERED REACTION TO PESTICIDES

Article 184 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, January 12, 1995 ; Page B06
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9501120021 -- 598 words

A Northern Virginia homeowners association has agreed to create a no-pesticide zone around the town house of a woman who has severe reactions to chemicals.

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DON HENRI WOOD DIES AT AGE 61

HOWARD U. NEUROLOGY PROFESSOR

Article 185 of 276 found


Thursday, January 26, 1995 ; Page B07
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9501260033 -- 3982 words

Don Henri Wood, 61, a neurology professor and former neurology department chairman at the Howard University college of medicine, died of cancer Jan. 23 at Howard University Hospital. Dr. Wood, of Washington, lived in the area since 1970.

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THE HOME GAMBLING NETWORK

IT'S ILLEGAL, MAYBE IMMORAL, BUT IS THE CYBERSPACE CASINO A GOOD BET?

Article 186 of 276 found

By Richard Leiby
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, February 24, 1995 ; Page C01
Section: STYLE
Article ID: 9502240040 -- 1204 words

NEW YORK -- Surrounded by a sea of techno-suits discussing the future of media convergence in a bidirectional world of system-neutral platforms, the guy with the shaved head and black leather jacket had to smirk. "What's funny to me," John Bates said, "is how tremendously clueless most of these people are."

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BILL TO INCREASE HILL CONTROL OVER AIRPORTS ADVANCES

Article 187 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, March 2, 1995 ; Page B02
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9503020067 -- 664 words

A House committee approved a bill yesterday that would increase congressional control over National Airport and clear the way for more flights there, despite federal court rulings striking down two earlier attempts to give Congress oversight power.

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SHOOTING BY OFFICER DRAWS FEDERAL INQUIRY

CIVIL RIGHTS GROUPS PROTEST ALEXANDRIA PROSECUTOR'S DECISION NOT TO FILE CHARGES

Article 188 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, April 13, 1995 ; Page B01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9504130061 -- 746 words

Civil rights groups expressed outrage yesterday at an Alexandria prosecutor's decision not to file charges against a police officer who shot an unarmed drug suspect 15 times, an act that a lawyer for the victim's family termed "a public execution."

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CLEARING A LOW HURDLE

Article 189 of 276 found

By Marylou Tousignant and Peter Baker
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, May 18, 1995 ; Page V01
Section: WEEKLY - VIRGINIA
Article ID: 9505180117 -- 1040 words

Perhaps the most important lesson in any Politics 101 class is managing expectations. Gov. George Allen (R) showed again last week that he was an attentive student.

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A BRIGHT STUDENT, A QUIET NEIGHBOR

WHITE HOUSE SUSPECT'S ACQUAINTANCES TELL OF JOB AND MONEY TROUBLES

Article 190 of 276 found

By Eric Lipton and Debbi Wilgoren
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, May 25, 1995 ; Page A25
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9505250079 -- 958 words

Leland William Modjeski drifted in and out of a community college for a decade before settling in at George Mason University, receiving a bachelor's degree with distinction in 1989 and a master's over the next three years.

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THE TV COLUMN

Article 191 of 276 found

By John Carmody
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 22, 1995 ; Page C04
Section: STYLE
Article ID: 9506220026 -- 1877 words

Television legend Norman Lear yesterday agreed to sell the eight TV stations controlled by his ACT III Broadcasting for more than $500 million . . .

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PROPOSAL FOR POLICE REVIEW BOARD DROPPED

AT CHARGED' COUNCIL HEARING, OFFICERS OPPOSE PANEL ON BRUTALITY

Article 192 of 276 found

By Steve Bates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 22, 1995 ; Page V01
Section: WEEKLY - VIRGINIA
Article ID: 9506220159 -- 728 words

After an emotional, three-hour public hearing Saturday, Alexandria City Council member William Euille withdrew his proposal to create a citizen panel to review claims of police brutality.

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VIRGINIANS GET READY TO CONCEAL ARMS

STATE'S NEW WEAPON LAW BRINGS A FLOOD OF INQUIRIES

Article 193 of 276 found

By Eric Lipton
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 28, 1995 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9506280063 -- 1384 words

Court clerks across Virginia are being flooded with thousands of phone calls from people asking how they can get permits to carry concealed handguns once one of the nation's most permissive weapon laws goes into effect Saturday.

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FOR TREASURY'S SELF-ASSURED SUMMERS, A SENATE TEST LOOMS

Article 194 of 276 found

By Clay Chandler
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 21, 1995 ; Page B01
Section: FINANCIAL
Article ID: 9507210103 -- 1226 words

On a wintry day just before Bill Clinton's inaugural, the president-elect's leading economic advisers gathered at transition headquarters on Vermont Avenue NW for a discussion led by financier Robert E. Rubin.

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AREA RESIDENTS TAKE A NIGHT OUT OF CRIME

COMMUNITIES BAND TOGETHER IN SPIRIT OF SAFETY

Article 195 of 276 found

By Scott Bowles
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, August 2, 1995 ; Page D01
Section: METRO
Article ID: 9508020050 -- 767 words

On a night dedicated to preventing future crimes, Norma M. Broadnax spent hers focusd on one in the past.

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THE SEASON: MOVIES

Article 196 of 276 found


Sunday, September 10, 1995 ; Page G17
Section: SUNDAY ARTS
Article ID: 9509100070 -- 1801 words

(Dates are subject to change.)

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BELIZE, THE BILLIONAIRE AND SARASOTA

KASSEBAUM'S PLAN FOR THE FDA

Article 197 of 276 found

By Al Kamen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, September 11, 1995 ; Page A19
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9509110067 -- 931 words

Kenneth Dart, the billionaire investor and foam-cup maker, made something of a splash early last year when he was reported to have renounced his U.S. citizenship in order to become a citizen of Belize and avoid paying U.S. income taxes.

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WASHINGTON COMES TO A STOP

THEN PENT-UP EMOTIONS START SPILLING OUT

Article 198 of 276 found

By Paul Duggan
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, October 4, 1995 ; Page A01
Section: A SECTION
Article ID: 9510040075 -- 1778 words

As the most-watched murder trial in U.S. history reached its climax yesterday, the nation's capital stood frozen, riveted to TV sets as a host of painful issues -- class, race, homicide, police conduct -- were reduced to two short words in the O.J. Simpson case:

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TO KILL EVERYMAN

A NEW CHAPTER IN AMERICAN TERRORISM

Article 199 of 276 found

By Nicholas von Hoffman
Sunday, October 15, 1995 ; Page C01
Section: OUTLOOK
Article ID: 9510150107 -- 1746 words

CRIMES OF passion used to be committed by people who knew their victims. The chorus wouldn't be prancing around the opera house singing the "Habanera" if Carmen had been killed in a drive-by shooting. By comparison, you may be sure that the existence of Mitchell Bates, the unlucky Pullman car porter killed in the wrecking of the Amtrak passenger train in Arizona last week, was unknown to the person or persons who caused his death.

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NFL NOTES: WEEK 7

Article 200 of 276 found


Monday, October 16, 1995 ; Page C06
Section: SPORTS
Article ID: 9510160129 -- 649 words

A SAINT HE AIN'T

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