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Saturday, November 13, 2004

TODAY'S HIGHLIGHTS
Deputy Chief Resigns From CIA
John E. McLaughlin, a 32-year CIA veteran who was acting director this summer, leaves as the agency appears to be in turmoil and others are threatening to leave.
(By Dana Priest and Walter Pincus, The Washington Post)

U.S. Forces Meet Fierce Resistance In Fallujah
Push South Greeted By 'Hornet's Nest'
(The Washington Post)

Peterson Convicted Of Double Murder
(The Washington Post)

POLITICS
Deputy Chief Resigns From CIA
John E. McLaughlin, a 32-year CIA veteran who was acting director this summer, leaves as the agency appears to be in turmoil and others are threatening to leave.
(By Dana Priest and Walter Pincus, The Washington Post)

Education Secretary Paige Plans to Step Down
Bush Aide Spellings Is Likely Successor
(The Washington Post)

Bush Goal: Palestinian State by 2009
(The Washington Post)

Election Map Makers, Exercising Some Latitude
(The Washington Post)

Ashcroft Decries Court Rulings
'Second-Guessing' Bush on Security Raises Risk, He Says
(The Washington Post)

More Politics

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NATION
Deputy Chief Resigns From CIA
John E. McLaughlin, a 32-year CIA veteran who was acting director this summer, leaves as the agency appears to be in turmoil and others are threatening to leave.
(By Dana Priest and Walter Pincus, The Washington Post)

Peterson Convicted Of Double Murder
(The Washington Post)

Airlines Must Hand Over Records
TSA Requests Passenger Data to Test Its Screening System
(The Washington Post)

Crackdown Targets New Wave of Mobs
(The Washington Post)

More Nation

WORLD
Palestinians Bury Arafat Amid Gunfire, Chaos
Mayhem greeted Arafat's remains on their return to Ramallah, forcing apprehensive officials to cancel a planned funeral and rush the burial.
(By Molly Moore and John Ward Anderson, The Washington Post)

U.S. Forces Meet Fierce Resistance In Fallujah
Push South Greeted By 'Hornet's Nest'
(The Washington Post)

Ivory Coast Violence Breaks French Connection
Angry Mobs Rampage Through Areas and Businesses Identified With Former Colonial Ruler
(The Washington Post)

China Now Test-Flying Homemade AWACS
Radar Planes Intended For Use in Taiwan Strait
(The Washington Post)

More World

METRO
Big Names, Big Money For a Personal Cause
Rockville mogul Don Wood, who once survived a firing by Donald Trump, has breathed new life into a Washington fundraiser devoted to fighting cystic fibrosis, a disease that affects 30,000 Americans, including Wood's daughter, Rachel.
(By Darragh Johnson, The Washington Post)

NTSB Warned Metro in '96 to Reinforce Rail Cars
Transit Agency's Decision Not to Remedy 'Telescoping' Draws New Interest After Woodley Park Crash
(The Washington Post)

WASA to Replace 2,800 Lead Pipes Over Next Year
(The Washington Post)

Hinckley Therapist Says Relationship Is No Problem
(The Washington Post)

Ehrlich Planning To Sell Off More Land
Discussions Continue On Thousands of Acres
(The Washington Post)

More Metro

BUSINESS
The Toy War Begins
The traditional holiday shopping season does not kick off until Nov. 26, two weeks from now, but the nation's biggest toy retailers are already aggressively jostling to offer the lowest prices.
(By Michael Barbaro, The Washington Post)

Inquiry Into Insurance Fraud Grows
Civil Charge Filed Against Consultant
(The Washington Post)

Spray Flu Vaccine Comes at a Trickle
Despite New Doses, FluMist Could Be as Elusive as Shots
(The Washington Post)

Industry Plans To Keep Up The Pressure
Housing Groups See No Chance To Relax Lobbying After Bush Win
(The Washington Post)

Fed Sticks With Its 'Measured' Pace
Minutes Show Support for Gradual Interest Rate Increases
(The Washington Post)

More Business

TECHNOLOGY
Microsoft Takes Lead in Software For Handhelds
Microsoft has unseated the Palm system with worldwide sales of more than 1.3 million units over the third quarter of the year, compared with slightly more than 850,000 for the Palm, according to a new report.
(By Mike Musgrove, The Washington Post)

Spray Flu Vaccine Comes at a Trickle
Despite New Doses, FluMist Could Be as Elusive as Shots
(The Washington Post)

More Technology

SPORTS
Expos Release Plan
Washington's team begins to unveil its plans to sell season tickets, marking the first tangible way for fans to connect with the team.
(By Barry Svrluga, The Washington Post)

Meola Knows Goal May Be Unattainable
Recovered From Injury, Wizards Keeper Wants In
(The Washington Post)

Redskins' Smoot, Springs Have Turned the Corner
(The Washington Post)

Area Women's Teams Work to Attract a Crowd
Mystics Draw, but College Attendance Suffers
(The Washington Post)

Cavs Have Chance to Measure Up
For 21 Years, Miami Has Been The One to Chase
(The Washington Post)

More Sports

STYLE
Speed Writing
For the authors participating in a 30-day novel writing challenge, a faster piece is better than a masterpiece.
(By Libby Copeland, The Washington Post)

Where Aired, 'Private Ryan' Draws a Crowd
(The Washington Post)

Kennedy Center Actor Remains Hospitalized
(The Washington Post)

Before the BSO's Moving Day, a Very Moving Night
(The Washington Post)

Election Map Makers, Exercising Some Latitude
(The Washington Post)

More Style

EDITORIALS, OPINIONS AND LETTERS
Palestinians and Democracy
WITH BRITISH Prime Minister Tony Blair at his side, President Bush yesterday offered a heartening commitment to pursue Palestinian democracy and statehood...

Curveballs in the Dark
SELDOM HAS a groundbreaking financial plan, such as the building of a major league baseball park, traveled so far and so fast with so little public...

GovBobTV
IT MAY NOT top "Desperate Housewives" in the Nielsen ratings, but Maryland Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr.'s taxpayer-sponsored TV blitz of "Governor Bob"...

More Editorials, Opinions and Letters


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