Thursday, September 28, 2017

Thursday's Headlines: Visionary editor who created Playboy magazine dies at 91

 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
Obituaries • 1926–2017
Hugh Hefner, visionary editor who created Playboy magazine, dies at 91
From the first issue of Playboy in 1953, Hugh Hefner sought to overturn what he considered the puritanical moral code of Middle America. His magazine was shocking at the time, but it introduced nudity and sexuality to the cultural mainstream of America — and quickly found a large and receptive audience.
Celebrities and civil rights leaders remember Hefner
The actress Kat Denning remembered meeting Hugh Hefner at his famed mansion, where he was "very nice to my mom."
 
Alabama defeat weakens and isolates Trump as his problems grow
President Trump's political vitality within his party now stands in question, as his vocal campaigning in Alabama for Luther Strange came to naught, his legislative agenda lies in tatters and his response to Hurricane Maria's destruction has come under siege from members of both parties.
 
The Debrief: Trump stays unusually subdued in Indiana pitch for tax plan
The president delivered one of his more staid performances, incorporating rhetorical tactics of more traditional presidents.
 
Fact Checker: Trump's tax speech was filled with his favorite, inaccurate claims
The president trotted out some golden oldies for his tax speech. They are still inaccurate.
 
'Why can't we get out of here?' Damaged airports in Puerto Rico and other islands are slow to recover
Getting off storm-ravaged Caribbean islands has been an exercise in frustration, often culminating in despair, rage and another night in a hot airport with no air conditioning and the steady boil of angry voices.
 
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Of course Tom Price shouldn't have to fly coach!
 
How Steve Bannon just defeated Trump
 
It's time for Mitch McConnell to go
 
This city is the capital of alternative facts
 
The Puerto Ricans are coming
 
Can't we get this one thing right?
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Interior secretary says workers are disloyal. They see his personnel moves as illegal.
An inspector general probe is investigating whether Ryan Zinke acted inappropriately when the department reassigned dozens of workers.
 
 
EPA's Pruitt took charter, military flights that cost taxpayers more than $58,000
The head of the Environmental Protection Agency has taken at least four noncommercial and military flights since mid-February, according to records given to a congressional oversight committee and obtained by The Washington Post.
 
U.S. to send more 'strategic' military assets to South Korea to deter the north, Seoul says
In the face of North Korean threats, South Korea wants a greater show of U.S. weaponry.
 
The Great Firewall is closing in on China's Internet users
Since passing a broad new cybersecurity law in June, the Communist Party has rolled out regulations that reflect its desire to control and exploit every inch of the digital world, experts say.
 
How a little-known financial adviser launched a college hoops corruption case — and why it may get bigger
Once Marty Blazer agreed to become an informant, the FBI pursued Division I assistant coaches and a top Adidas executive, creating a scandal that led to the downfall of Louisville Coach Rick Pitino.
 
Jared Kushner registered to vote as a woman. It's not his first paperwork mistake.
The news that Kushner indicated he was a woman when he signed up to vote in New York struck some as ironic given President Trump's emphasis on rooting out allegedly rampant voter fraud.
 
Obama said leaving Malia at college was 'like open heart surgery.' Of course he cried.
"I was proud I did not cry in front of her," he said of seeing his eldest daughter off to Harvard. The trip home, though, was a different matter.
 
     
 
 
 
 

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