Rescuers: Metro didn’t relay severity of crisis
Lori Aratani, Peter Hermann and Mary Pat Flaherty
City documents say the first responders to reach the platform had no idea hundreds of passengers were gasping for breath.
Justices to make historic ruling on gay marriage
Robert Barnes
With cases from four states, the stage is set for a decision this term about whether states must allow same-sex couples to marry, a question left open in 2013.
In N. Korea, brainwashing starts early
Anna Fifield
From praising their leaders for the milk they drink to solving math problems about the number of Kim Il Sung’s troops, the country’s schoolchildren are taught to believe their leaders are godlike.
Holder limits local authorities’
ability to seize assets without proof
Robert O’Harrow Jr., Sari Horwitz and Steven Rich
The action represents a sweeping check on the power of police to confiscate under federal law.
Mitt Romney, eyeing 2016, departs from themes he sounded in 2012
Dan Balz and Philip Rucker
Speaking to Republicans at an RNC reception, Romney offered an economic message about poverty.
Author, survivor of 1984 rape at
U-Va. now doubts Rolling Stone story
T. Rees Shapiro
Liz Seccuro sees red flags in the magazine’s rape account, which has similarities to her own attack.
Most public school students
in the U.S. live in poverty
Lyndsey Layton
The explosion in the number of needy children in classrooms has profound implications for the nation.
Meet the honor brigade, an organized campaign to silence debate on Islam
Asra Q. Nomani
OUTLOOK | Self-styled blasphemy police count on a shame-based culture that values face-saving.
I let my child ride the subway alone. I got labeled the ‘world’s worst mom.’
Lenore Skenazy
The “Free Range Kids” movement is great for children, but society hasn’t gotten the memo.
- King: Stop sugarcoating terrorism
- Marcus: France’s fuzziness on free speech
- Arne Duncan: Improving education isn’t optional
- Milbank: The stale 2016 presidential contest
- Five myths about Mitt Romney
- Six steps the U.S. can take to protect its interests
- Colleges are not the place to try rape cases
Eric Holder makes the right call
Editorial Board
Mr. Holder is right to revise his stance on investigating reporters.
More Headlines
She’s Microsoft, but he’s Apple
Amanda McGrath
DATE LAB | Those differing opinions didn’t stop them from having intelligent conversation.
Have you seen this movie before?
Increasingly, yes you have.
Cecilia Kang
Hollywood’s growing reliance on sequels and spinoffs is limiting the variety you see on the big screen.
Obama’s State of the Union policy success rate dropped dramatically after his reelection
Colby Itkowitz 11:00 AM ET
IN THE LOOP | Will President Obama do better in 2015 with his policy wants than he did in 2013? He better hope so.
Stampede in Shanghai on New Year’s Eve turns into a political scandal
William Wan
Thirty-six people died that night and now the tragedy could be used to oust the president’s party rivals.
The New Yorker cover on Martin Luther King Jr. connects Selma and Ferguson
Mark Berman
King is paired with Michael Brown, Eric Garner, Wenjian Liu and Trayvon Martin.
Concussions vs. culture of masculinity
Matt Ventresca
If we want to help male athletes combat brain injury, we’ll need to confront the value system that condones it.
Maryland’s larger counties, expecting a funding fight, look to join forces
Bill Turque and Arelis R. Hernandez
A greater share of money probably will flow to rural areas under the new GOP administration.
Nets surprise listless Wizards
Jorge Castillo
Brook Lopez, Jarrett Jack score 26 apiece as Brooklyn snaps seven-game losing streak with 102-80 win.
Post’s Pulitzer-winning photographer remembered for his ‘lovely soul’
Paul Farhi
The memorial service for Michel du Cille recalled an artist who liked people and whose work showed it.
‘Boy Who Came Back From Heaven’
is now going back to its publisher
Ron Charles
The author who said he saw heaven while in a coma as a 6-year-old has recanted, “I did not go to heaven.”
Coming soon: Cheap, life-saving drugs
Jason Millman
The government is close to approving the first in a new class of inexpensive medicines that treat everything from arthritis to cancer.
Benefits of budgeting: Day 7 of the 21-day financial fast
Michelle Singletary
Today’s lesson: Budgeting is a road map to prosperity.
VA police highlight security lapses in hospitals
Emily Wax-Thibodeaux
FEDERAL EYE | VA police officers ask for more staff, better training and increased resources -- from fixing broken radios and cameras to installing metal detectors and developing clear procedures for how to deal with agitated patients
Will it be easier to get a mortgage in 2015?
Michele Lerner
Regulators and lenders are loosening restrictions a bit, but in the meantime, buyers will still face tougher rules.
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