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Washington Post Magazine
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Stories
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Bringing Jim Thorpe Home
by Neely Tucker + Follow
Washington Post Magazine | February 2012
The battle over the primordial American athlete's burial site continues.
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The New Face of Assisted Suicide
by Manuel Roig-Franzia + Follow
Washington Post Magazine | January 2012
After the death of Jack Kevorkian, Lawrence Egbert is the new public face of American assisted suicide.
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Why Sonja Sohn Couldn’t Leave Baltimore’s Troubled Streets Behind
by Phil Zabriskie + Follow
Washington Post Magazine | January 2012
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In a New Elite Army Unit, Women Serve Alongside Special Forces, But First They Must Make the Cut
by Kevin Maurer + Follow
Washington Post Magazine | October 2011
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Tea Party Road Trip
by Bill Donahue + Follow
Washington Post Magazine | October 2010
What the movement wants -- and why.
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Notes from a Wedding
by Lauren Wilcox + Follow
Washington Post Magazine | February 2010
In the age of digital music and the relative bargain of a single DJ, wedding singer Kenney Holmes is determined to keep it real.
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Fatal Distraction
by Gene Weingarten + Follow
Washington Post Magazine | March 2009
An absent-minded parent forgets a child in the backseat of the car on a hot day. And the child suffocates. It is a horrifying tragedy. Is it also a crime?
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Ways and Means
by Bill Donahue + Follow
Washington Post Magazine | June 2008
Over four decades, Russell Means has led an insurrection, posed for Andy Warhol, aspired to be an assassin and been arguably the most influential public figure in fighting racism against the American Indian. Now, in his quest to start his own country, the road to success might run down Embassy Row.
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Pearls Before Breakfast
by Gene Weingarten + Follow
Washington Post Magazine | April 2007
Can one of the nation's great musicians cut through the fog of a D.C. rush hour? Let's find out.
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The Peekaboo Paradox
by Gene Weingarten + Follow
Washington Post Magazine | January 2006