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Washington Post Co.

Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Washington Post Co. published by Tribune Company sources.

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    Aug 25, 2009 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  1. Deaths elsewhere

    STANLEY H. KAPLAN, 90 Test preparation company founder The founder of the Stanley H. Kaplan Educational Centers Ltd., who built the nation's first test preparation company, has died. He was 90. Stanley H. Kaplan passed away from natural...
  2. Aug 25, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  3. Stanley H. Kaplan dies at 90; founded test-prep company

    Stanley H. Kaplan, the founder and namesake of the nation's first test-preparation company, died of heart failure Sunday at his home in New York City. He was 90.
    Times Staff And Wire Reports
    Stanley H. Kaplan, the founder and namesake of the nation's first test-preparation company, died of heart failure Sunday at his home in New York City. He was 90. Kaplan started a tutoring company in his parents' Brooklyn home in 1938. In 1946, a...

    Tags: Colleges and Universities, Teaching and Learning, Newspapers, Examinations, New York Times

  4. Jul 13, 2009 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  5. Video game depiction of Navy football gets more real

    Washington Post reporter
    When Navy junior wide receiver Mario Washington gets his hands on NCAA Football 10, the latest edition of the popular EA Sports video game, he will immediately pull up the Midshipmen and see how accurately the game represents his team. For the most part,...

    Tags: Anthony White, Game Playing, Colleges and Universities, Armed Forces, Video Games

  6. Jul 20, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  7. Obama Demands Congress Move Quickly On Healthcare Reform

    President Obama, calling the need for healthcare reform "urgent" and "indisputable," said today that it is not his own political fortune that is at stake, but rather the health of the nation's economy.
    Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
    President Obama, calling the need for healthcare reform "urgent" and "indisputable," said today that it is not his own political fortune that is at stake, but rather the health of the nation's economy. "The need for reform is urgent, and it is...

    Tags: Polls, Healthcare Provider, Government, Michael Steele, Hospitals and Clinics

  8. Aug 17, 2009 |Story| WTVR-LTV
  9. McDonnell Up In New Washington Post Poll

    The Republican who wants to be Virginia's next governor is maintaining a lead over his Democratic opponent in a new poll.
    Producer
    The Republican who wants to be Virginia's next governor is maintaining a lead over his Democratic opponent in a new poll. The new Washington Post survey shows 47% of registered voters backing Bob McDonnell, with 40% supporting Creigh Deeds. The poll...

    Tags: CBS Corp., Bob McDonnell

  10. Aug 19, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. "60 Minutes" Creator Don Hewitt Dies 86

    Don Hewitt, the innovative television news pioneer who changed the face of broadcast journalism in 1968 as the creator and executive producer of " 60 Minutes," the long-running CBS News powerhouse that launched the TV newsmagazine genre and turned a ticking stopwatch into a journalistic icon, died today. He was 86.
    Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
    Don Hewitt, the innovative television news pioneer who changed the face of broadcast journalism in 1968 as the creator and executive producer of " 60 Minutes," the long-running CBS News powerhouse that launched the TV newsmagazine genre and turned a...

    Tags: NBC, Newspaper and Magazine, Richard Nixon, Academic Progress, Periodicals

  12. Aug 15, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. Margaret Bush Wilson dies at 90; first black woman to head national NAACP board

    Margaret Bush Wilson, the first African American woman to head the national NAACP board of directors, and who was ousted in 1983 after a public feud with its executive director, died Tuesday  at Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis of multiple organ failure. She was 90.
    Margaret Bush Wilson, the first African American woman to head the national NAACP board of directors, and who was ousted in 1983 after a public feud with its executive director, died Tuesday at Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis of multiple organ...

    Tags: Colleges and Universities, NAACP, St. Louis, Lawyers, Homes

  14. Aug 20, 2009 |Story| Associated Press
  15. Defiant Afghan voters trickle to polling centers, express hope, fear and pride

    KABUL (AP) — Some voted eagerly, but many held back and waited to hear if the Taliban would make good on vows of violence Thursday in Afghanistan's presidential election.
    KABUL (AP) — Some voted eagerly, but many held back and waited to hear if the Taliban would make good on vows of violence Thursday in Afghanistan's presidential election. Those who defied the militants' threats and went to the polls displayed a...

    Tags: Polls, Armed Conflicts, Afghanistan, Osama bin Laden, Diplomacy

  16. Jul 18, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  17. Walter Cronkite dies at 92; longtime CBS anchorman

    Walter Cronkite, the television newsman whose steady baritone informed, reassured and guided the nation during the tumultuous 1960s and '70s and who was still regarded as "the most trusted man in America" years after leaving his CBS anchor chair, has died. He was 92.
    Walter Cronkite, the television newsman whose steady baritone informed, reassured and guided the nation during the tumultuous 1960s and '70s and who was still regarded as "the most trusted man in America" years after leaving his CBS anchor chair, has...

    Tags: Democratic Convention (1968), Newspaper and Magazine, International Military Interventions, Richard Nixon, Academic Progress

  18. Jul 27, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. Betty Allen dies at 82; mezzo-soprano and music teacher

    Betty Allen, one of the first African American singers to reach prominence on the international opera stage, died June 22 of complications from kidney disease at a hospital in Valhalla, N.Y. She was 82.
    Betty Allen, one of the first African American singers to reach prominence on the international opera stage, died June 22 of complications from kidney disease at a hospital in Valhalla, N.Y. She was 82. If contralto Marian Anderson in the 1930s and 1940s...

    Tags: Music Theater, Maytag Corporation, Opera (genre), Leonard Bernstein, Marian Anderson

  20. Jul 27, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  21. Harold W. Snider dies at 61; blind activist helped craft disability legislation

    Harold W. Snider, a prominent advocate for the blind who helped craft legislation that expanded the civil rights of Americans with disabilities and aided in the launching of an audible newspaper service, died June 26 at his home in Rockville, Md., after a...

    Tags: Rockville (Montgomery, Maryland), Colleges and Universities, Newspaper and Magazine, Government, University of Oxford

  22. Jun 6, 2009 |Story| RedEye
  23. Nature boy

    From news services
    When most celebrities set out to promote a movie, it's all about the interviews. Maybe a news conference here or there. A talk show appearance to make sure they're covering all their bases. Will Ferrell, whose movie "Land of the Lost" opened Friday, is...

    Tags: Monsters (legendary creatures), Celebrity, Will Ferrell, The Associated Press, Star Trek (movie, 2009)

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Washington Post Co. Photos
Tom Toles / The Washington Post
(November 14, 2008)
Tom Toles / The Washington Post
Photos taken from newseum.org
(November 5, 2008)
<big>The Washington Post</big>
Tom Toles / Washington Post
(October 24, 2008)
Tom Toles / Washington Post