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  2. Ann Coulter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann_Coulter

    Coulter as a senior in high school, 1980. Ann Hart Coulter was born on December 8, 1961, [4] in New York City, to John Vincent Coulter (1926–2008), an FBI agent from a working class Catholic Irish American and German American family [5] in Albany, New York, and Nell Husbands Coulter (née Martin; 1928–2009), who was born in Paducah, Kentucky.

  3. What Bullets Do to Bodies - Highline

    highline.huffingtonpost.com/articles/en/gun-violence

    We are inundated with news about shootings. Fourteen dead in San Bernardino, six in Michigan, 11 over one weekend in Chicago. We get names, places, anguished Facebook posts, wonky articles full of statistics on crime rates and risk, Twitter arguments about the Second Amendment—everything except the blood, the pictures of bodies torn by bullets.

  4. Business Insider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_Insider

    Business Insider was launched in 2007 [7] and is based in Manhattan.Founded by DoubleClick's former CEO Kevin P. Ryan, Dwight Merriman, and Henry Blodget, [8] the site began as a consolidation of industry vertical blogs, the first of them being Silicon Alley Insider (launched May 16, 2007) and Clusterstock (launched March 20, 2008). [9]

  5. The Subsidy Gap - The Huffington Post

    projects.huffingtonpost.com/projects/ncaa/...

    The Huffington Post and The Chronicle of Higher Education have teamed up to tell the story of what the subsidization of college athletics means for universities like James Madison and for the students who are forced to foot the bill, often without their knowledge or real consent. The investigation, which included an analysis of financial ...

  6. And So Jedidiah Brown Gave All of ... - The Huffington Post

    highline.huffingtonpost.com/articles/en/trauma...

    She, too, would soon scale back her activism. At the hospital that day, Rachel saw Jedidiah only as an interloper parading for the news cameras. “This is not the family you want to do this with,” she said, as they began to argue. She yelled at him to get out. Jedidiah reeled from the hospital to his family’s post-church meal.

  7. Arianna Huffington - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arianna_Huffington

    In February 2011, AOL acquired The Huffington Post for US$315 million, making Huffington editor-in-chief of The Huffington Post Media Group. [44] In 2012, The Huffington Post became the first commercially run United States digital media enterprise to win a Pulitzer Prize. [45] In 2016, Huffington officially departed from The Huffington Post. [46]

  8. State atheism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_atheism

    It published its own newspaper, and journals, sponsored lectures, and organized demonstrations that lampooned religion and promoted atheism. [68] Anti-religious and atheistic propaganda was implemented into every portion of soviet life from schools to the media and even on to substituting rituals to replace religious ones. [56]

  9. United States withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_withdrawal...

    Trump said at a news conference, “We’ll be doing a snapback. You’ll be watching it next week”. This referred to the legal claim that the US remains a participant in the 2015 Iran nuclear deal despite having withdrawn from it, a claim Washington's European allies reject.