Barack Obama Will Never Be President

Friday, September 14, 2007

Barack Obama

Barack Obama

Barack Obama

Obama was born in Honolulu, Hawaii to Barack Obama, Sr. (born in Nyanza Province, Kenya) and Ann Dunham (born in Wichita, Kansas). Barack Hussein Obama (born August 4, 1961) is the junior United States Senator from Illinois and a member of the Democratic Party.

Obama grew up in culturally diverse surroundings. He spent most of his childhood in the majority-minority U.S. state of Hawaii and lived for four years in Indonesia. Obama delivered the keynote address at the 2004 Democratic National Convention while still an Illinois state legislator. Since announcing his candidacy in February 2007, Obama has emphasized ending the Iraq War and implementing universal health care as campaign themes.

As a member of the Democratic minority in the 109th Congress, Obama co-sponsored the enactment of conventional weapons control and transparency legislation, and made official trips to Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. Obama's parents separated when he was two years old and later divorced. His father went to Harvard University to pursue Ph.D. studies, then returned to Kenya, where he died in an auto accident when the younger Obama was twenty-one years old.

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Friday, September 14, 2007

TODAY'S HIGHLIGHTS
Bush Tells Nation He Will Begin to Roll Back 'Surge'
President Bush tried to turn a corner in the fractious debate over Iraq last night by ordering the first limited troop withdrawals since voters elected an antiwar Congress last year. But the move did little to appease Democratic leaders, who dismissed it as a token gesture masking an open-ended c...
(By Peter Baker and Karen DeYoung, The Washington Post)

The President Asserted Progress on Security and Political Issues. Recent Reports Weren't Often So Upbeat.
(By Glenn Kessler, The Washington Post)

N.J.'s Corzine to Defy New Health-Care Rules
Fight Grows Over Changes in Children's Program
(By Christopher Lee, The Washington Post)

O'Malley Aims to Include Tax Cuts in Revenue Package
Measures Targeted to Working Families May Buy Political Capital in Face of Increases to Meet Shortfall
(By John Wagner, The Washington Post)

Bipartisan Proposal Would Cut $300 Million
(By Amy Gardner, The Washington Post)

More Today's Highlights

POLITICS
Bush Tells Nation He Will Begin to Roll Back 'Surge'
President Bush tried to turn a corner in the fractious debate over Iraq last night by ordering the first limited troop withdrawals since voters elected an antiwar Congress last year. But the move did little to appease Democratic leaders, who dismissed it as a token gesture masking an open-ended c...
(By Peter Baker and Karen DeYoung, The Washington Post)

Facing Tough Reelection Bids, GOP Moderates React With Concern
(By Jonathan Weisman and Paul Kane, The Washington Post)

Gonzales Ready to Leave the Stage
(By Dan Eggen, The Washington Post)

N.J.'s Corzine to Defy New Health-Care Rules
Fight Grows Over Changes in Children's Program
(By Christopher Lee, The Washington Post)

Taking the Hill By Air and Ground
Shift in Congress Favors Labor, UPS Over FedEx
(By Del Quentin Wilber and Jeffrey H. Birnbaum, The Washington Post)

More Politics

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NATION
Union Picks GM to Lead Contract Talks
Labor talks in Detroit intensified yesterday, with the United Auto Workers selecting General Motors as lead company in contract negotiations that analysts and auto officials say could determine the survival of the Big Three automakers.
(By Sholnn Freeman, The Washington Post)

Scholars Decry Law School's About-Face on New Dean
(By Sonya Geis, The Washington Post)

Bush Extends Liberians' Residency
(By Karin Brulliard, The Washington Post)

With Web's Help, The World Joins Search for Fossett
(By Karl Vick, The Washington Post)

Cuts Will Limit Climate Research, Experts Say
(The Washington Post)

More Nation

WORLD
Bomb Kills a Key Sunni Ally of U.S.
BAGHDAD, Sept. 13 -- A charismatic tribal leader who allied himself with the United States and rallied fractious Sunni groups against extremists who claim links to al-Qaeda was killed Thursday afternoon when a bomb exploded outside his house in Anbar province.
(By Joshua Partlow, Ann Scott Tyson and Robin Wright, The Washington Post)

Bangladeshi Child Star Hopes Life Will Mirror Art
Lead of Show About Girls' Education Fights to Stay in School
(By Emily Wax, The Washington Post)

In Rural Argentina, the Legacy of Migration
Exodus to the Cities Increasingly Exposes Those Left Behind to Hunger, Poor Health Care, Isolation
(By Monte Reel, The Washington Post)

Bush Tells Nation He Will Begin to Roll Back 'Surge'
Gen. Petraeus Says U.S. Is Projecting 'Sustainable Security' in Iraq by 2009
(By Peter Baker and Karen DeYoung, The Washington Post)

The President Asserted Progress on Security and Political Issues. Recent Reports Weren't Often So Upbeat.
(By Glenn Kessler, The Washington Post)

More World

METRO
O'Malley Aims to Include Tax Cuts in Revenue Package
Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley is angling to cut state property taxes and expand a tax credit that helps lower-income workers at the same time that he and lawmakers prepare to raise other taxes to close a looming $1.5 billion budget shortfall, according to several people familiar with his plans.
(By John Wagner, The Washington Post)

Still Working After All These Years
Reasons for Delaying Retirement Vary, but There Is No Mistaking the Trend
(By N.C. Aizenman and Pamela Constable, The Washington Post)

Bipartisan Proposal Would Cut $300 Million
(By Amy Gardner, The Washington Post)

Md. High School Closed for Second Day
(The Washington Post)

Man Charged In Bell High Fatal Shooting
(By Clarence Williams, The Washington Post)

More Metro

BUSINESS
Union Picks GM to Lead Contract Talks
Labor talks in Detroit intensified yesterday, with the United Auto Workers selecting General Motors as lead company in contract negotiations that analysts and auto officials say could determine the survival of the Big Three automakers.
(By Sholnn Freeman, The Washington Post)

Reaching His Prime Time in Afghanistan
Murdoch-Like Magnate Builds Media Empire
(By Frank Ahrens, The Washington Post)

Taking the Hill By Air and Ground
Shift in Congress Favors Labor, UPS Over FedEx
(By Del Quentin Wilber and Jeffrey H. Birnbaum, The Washington Post)

New Species Owe Names to Highest Bidder
(By Juliet Eilperin, The Washington Post)

Health Insurance Costs to Rise 2.1% Next Year
(By Stephen Barr, The Washington Post)

More Business

TECHNOLOGY
With Web's Help, The World Joins Search for Fossett
MINDEN, Nev., Sept. 13 -- The emptiness that adventure pilot Steve Fossett disappeared into at 10:30 a.m. on Labor Day appears almost endless from the air, a rugged moonscape of mountain ridges that deepen from brown to purple before dissolving into the horizon itself. There are mountains and more...
(By Karl Vick, The Washington Post)

Security Fix Live
(Brian Krebs, washingtonpost.com)

Google Backs Moon Challenge
Millions Are Offered for Privately Funded Lunar Probes
(By Alicia Chang, The Washington Post)

More Technology

SPORTS
Mountaineers Run Over Terps
Steve Slaton runs for 137 yards and three touchdowns and No. 4 West Virginia cruises past Maryland, 31-14, Thursday night.
(By Marc Carig, The Washington Post)

As Camp Opens, New Faces Give Caps a Reason to Smile
(By Tarik El-Bashir, The Washington Post)

Defense Aims to Corner Philadelphia
Redskins' 3-Back Rotation Hopes to Befuddle McNabb
(By Jason La Canfora, The Washington Post)

NFL Fines Belichick, Limits Patriots' Draft
(By Mark Maske, The Washington Post)

O's Trembley, D. Cabrera Suspended for On-Field Antics
(The Washington Post)

More Sports

STYLE
Hopper and The Strokes Of Midnight
Here's one clue to Edward Hopper. It comes from "What Are Masterpieces" by Gertrude Stein, which came out in 1940. "It is very curious," wrote that curious avant-gardist, "but the detective story . . . is . . . the only really modern novel form that has come into existence."
(By Paul Richard, The Washington Post)

Super-Fan Chief Zee's Heartfelt Comfort to the Enemy
(By Amy Argetsinger and Roxanne Roberts, The Washington Post)

On the Nation's TVs, A Familiar Picture
(By Tom Shales, The Washington Post)

'Brave One': On Target, but Is Its Aim True?
(By Stephen Hunter, The Washington Post)

Uneclipsed Days 'In the Shadow Of the Moon'
(By Joel Achenbach, The Washington Post)

More Style

LIVE DISCUSSIONS
Real Wheels
The Post's Warren Brown answers your questions about every aspect of the automotive industry.
(Warren Brown, washingtonpost.com)

Behind the Screen
Hollywood and Indie Offerings
(Desson Thomson, washingtonpost.com)

Archbishop Talks About D.C. Catholic Schools
(Donald Wuerl, washingtonpost.com)

College Football
(Eric Prisbell and Adam Kilgore, washingtonpost.com)

On TV
Reality, Non-Reality and Everything In-Between
(Lisa de Moraes, washingtonpost.com)

More Live Discussions

EDITORIALS
The Least Bad Plan
PRESIDENT BUSH'S explanation of his latest plans for Iraq last night was marred by a couple of important omissions. First, the president failed to acknowledge that, according to the standards he himself established in January, the surge of U.S. troops into Iraq has been a failure -- because Iraqi...
(The Washington Post)

Plane Truth
FAA Administrator Marion Blakey puts airlines on notice as she walks out the door.
(The Washington Post)

The Presumed Favorite
Mark Warner announces his campaign for the U.S. Senate.
(The Washington Post)

More Editorials


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