From the day of his first positive test until his hospitalization last year, the former president came in contact with more than 500 people in proximity to him or at crowded events, according to a Washington Post analysis.
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Oxford High School warned Ethan Crumbley’s parents of a violent drawing he'd made. Hours later, he was accused of killing classmates.
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A race to make historic changes as part of the defense authorization bill has left some advocates arguing that Congress’s legislation is too limited.
By Washington Post Staff
Perdue was narrowly forced into a runoff in the 2020 election and lost his seat to Democrat Jon Ossoff.
Robert J. Dole1923–2021
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As a virus evolves to become more transmissible, it generally “loses” traits that are likely to cause severe disease, researchers said.
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Today’s WorldViewAnalysis
If talks in Vienna lead nowhere, U.S. diplomats have suggested they would consider other options.
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Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and his family. (@repthomasmassie/Twitter/Reuters)
Omar also called House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy "a liar and a coward" for refusing to publicly condemn the remarks by Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.).
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For a couple, the baby talk is a sign of their bond — a boundary that sets them apart from everyone else.
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From The MagazineLost News: Stories in danger of not being told as local newspapers across the U.S. close
A grizzly bear on a road at night in the Bridger-Teton National Forest. (Natalie Behring for The Post)
In this Idaho community, killing grizzlies — a threatened species protected by federal law — is punishable with fines up to $50,000 and a year in prison. But someone was flouting the law.
By Natalie Schachar
Americans must understand the existential threat facing local news outlets.
A Better Glynn wanted a new police chief, a new district attorney and more police accountability.
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HOLIDAYS
While there’s no one-size-fits-all solution, a group of epidemiologists, infectious disease experts and physicians offer some advice.
By Deborah Lynn Blumberg
How best to navigate another pandemic holiday, especially if you’re dealing with grief, numbness or burnout.
By Soo Youn
The Post reached out to chefs, bloggers and authors from all over the country and in a few international locales to put together an eclectic, engaging array of cookies and confections.
By Becky Krystal
Whether you're shopping for him or her, mom or dad, we've got all the gift ideas you'll need.
By Washington Post Staff
Travel through time and geographies in the pages this year's best wine books.
Memoirs, cookbooks and biographies make great gifts.
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From the day of his first positive test until his hospitalization last year, the former president came in contact with more than 500 people in proximity to him or at crowded events, according to a Washington Post analysis.
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(Zach Purser Brown/The Washington Post)
Climate SolutionsVisionaries
At 12 years old, Alhaji Siraj Bah lived on the streets. A decade later, his business in Sierra Leone employs dozens of people working on an alternative to wood-based charcoal.
Decades of political organizing transformed the Republican Party into a force for remaking courts, and a separate revolution in law schools created the intellectual foundation.
Dole, who died Sunday at the age of 98, was severely injured in Italy during the waning days of the war. In an instant, his athletic career and medical aspirations were finished.
Kim Jong Un has signaled that a difficult winter is ahead, but details on crops and trade remain guarded.
Pope Francis greets two refugee girls in Mytilene on the island of Lesbos, Greece. (Reuters)
By Chico Harlan
Bashar al-Assad and his regime have raided and seized dozens of businesses, even targeting foreign corporations and family enterprises that stuck by him.
By Greg Miller and Liz Sly
Mount Semeru is the tallest mountain on Indonesia's densely populated island of Java. At least one person was killed.
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RetropolisThe Past, Rediscovered
The six-year Pentagon project identified nearly 400 who died on the USS Oklahoma in 1941.
Tired families wait for a shelter spot in Florida in 2017. (Michael S. Williamson/The Post)
By Erin Blakemore
Sen. Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.), chairman of the Judiciary Committee, called for the firing of Board of Prisons Director Michael Carvajal.
By Joe Davidson
My best teacher’s daring idea: have kids seek flaws in their textbooks
By Jay Mathews
The market plunge on Black Friday — and recovery on Monday — after the news about omicron offers an important lesson to investors: If you’re going to own stocks long term, you need to have enough cash on hand to ride out volatility.
By Allan Sloan
Capital One announced it's eliminating overdraft fees. Other financial institutions should follow suit.
(The Post)
Amazon's use of Alexa as a wake word for its voice assistant turned the name into a command, impacting daily interactions for people with the name.
Why Twitter chose Parag Agrawal, an engineer with limited management experience, for one of the most fraught roles in tech.
By Will Oremus and Elizabeth Dwoskin
The attack took Maryland’s health department offline this weekend, as officials worked to assess the extent of the intrusion.
By Dan Diamond
(Family photo)
From Ford to Lamborghini, cars (and trucks) can bury themselves in our souls.
By John Kelly
The Texas-based movie theater chain’s latest outpost opens Dec. 10 in Northeast DC.
Taylor Heinicke celebrates after Washington’s win in Las Vegas. (Jonathan Newton/The Post)
By Jerry Brewer
Alabama will play Cincinnati in one semifinal while Michigan will take on Georgia in the other semifinal. Both games will be played Dec. 31.
With the Terps still processing the "kind of unreal" situation, Maryland's post-Mark Turgeon debut is far from ideal in a loss to Northwestern.
Maryland’s trip to Yankee Stadium will mark the program’s first appearance in the postseason since 2016. The Terrapins haven’t won a bowl game since 2010,
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The Cavaliers will face Southern Methodist at Fenway Park on Dec. 29 in the fourth bowl game in last five years under departing Bronco Mendenhall.
By Gene Wang
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RetropolisThe Past, Rediscovered
The early battles between the Salt Lake Tribune and the Latter-day Saints church-affiliated Deseret News sometimes turned violent.
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A father's cruelty led his child to choose estrangement, but he won't take "no contact" for an answer.
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Reader resentful that wife wants to pursue a second degree after years as a homemaker.
The LilyElevating stories about women
The stage version of the 1993 film feels like an erratic musical-theater equivalent of a tribute band.
By Peter Marks
The Iphigenia sacrifice scene in Wayne Shorter and Esperanza Spalding’s “. . . (Iphigenia).” (Jon Fine)
The Grammy-winning duo’s “. . . (Iphigenia)” opens Dec. 10 at the Kennedy Center.
Joanne Shenandoah1957–2021
Shenandoah received worldwide acclaim for her music that drew on her heritage as a member of the Oneida Nation and made her one of the country’s most honored and popular Indigenous performers.
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Delving into 18-years-worth of Sedaris’s diary entries, the narration of “Carnival of Snackery” is wonderful. Other great listens include “The Five Wounds” and “Psycho by the Sea.”
By Katherine A. Powers
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