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Robin Washington


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Spike in gas price sparks economics lesson

Robin Washington: If you participate in a 401(k) plan that even remotely touches the stock market, be sure to tell the administrator where you want your pork bellies delivered.

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That yarmulke says Duluth all over it

Robin Washington column: For four days each May, I wear a yarmulke pretty much continuously. Not because it’s any Jewish holiday (they tend to run one, two or eight days) but because I’m celebrating my identity among others doing the same.

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Their tragedy is our tragedy

ROBIN WASHINGTON: One year, I got the easy assignment. As long as nobody seriously got hurt — and you sincerely hoped not, for their sake and yours — the medical tent was one-stop shopping for compelling stories. Their bodies would be shivering, wrapped in space blankets, testifying to human endurance. Their faces beamed personal achievement.

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A snow news day — and a little bit of Sylvia Plath

Robin Washington column: I had been looking forward to cavorting with the English majors, if for no other reason than to hear what they thought about being the butt of a Garrison Keillor routine.

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As a matter of record, Carlson is front-page news

Robin Washington column: Remember this item in the News Tribune? “Duluth police raided two downtown shops Tuesday, filling a truck, a van and a car with suspected drug paraphernalia. … Police also seized an illegal military assault rifle from the Last Place on Earth,” a police spokesman said.

The Rose Man remembered

ROBIN WASHINGTON: I don’t think he knew it, but Kevin Ferris was my fashion guru.

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Have a roadkill recipe to share? Montana might just bite …

Robin Washington column: I’m hardly the most religious person in the world, but I do keep kosher — especially during Passover this week. So you’re not likely to find me eating roadkill. Apparently, I don’t know what I’m missing.

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Editor's view: Blondie’s back — with Pearls

ROBIN WASHINGTON: Two weeks ago, I announced the News Tribune was canceling the comic strip that’s run in the paper since 1937; not because of its quality, but because of how much we were being charged for it.

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Sojourner traveled a perilous road for freedom

ROBIN WASHINGTON: If you’ve gotten to know Sue Sojourner since her move to Duluth in the late 1990s, you’re probably aware of her civil rights work in Mississippi.

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Remembering, and thanking, Rosa Parks

ROBIN WASHINGTON: Today is the 100th anniversary of the birth of Rosa Parks. News Tribune editor Robin Washington wrote a tribute at the time of her passing on Oct. 24, 2005, that still resonates today.

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Columns

Before ‘42,’ interracial teams barnstormed the Northland

Robin Washington column: ‘42’ is a classic based-on-a-true story biopic. Making the rounds concurrent with the movie is “Color Blind: The Forgotten Team that Broke Baseball’s Color Line” by Tom Dunkel, the story of a semipro team formed in Bismarck, N.D., in 1933, well before Robinson’s signing with Brooklyn in 1947.

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After suspect’s capture, city on a hill shines again

ROBIN WASHINGTON: The streets and landmarks were exactly as I knew them: I had walked along Norfolk Street in Cambridge, just down from where the Tsarnaevs now lived, visiting a

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Can we attract the barbed wire collectors to Duluth?

Robin Washington: It was dreadfully quiet in the skywalk last week after 3,000 high school robotics team members and their families had gone home. It kind of looked like … Duluth — just when we were getting used to a famished lunchtime crowd eating and spending its way from Famous Dave’s to Zen House.

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What was your worst-paid job?

Parade Magazine’s annual “What people earn” edition today might give us a sense of accomplishment for making more than the 54-year-old part-time clown from Topeka, Kan., even if few will ever see in a lifetime what a single-named British singer takes home in three months.

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Do high school students read newspapers? These will write for one

Robin Washington column: Young people don’t read the newspaper, right? They get whatever information they need from the net, correct? Not if you’re talking about the Duluth East Daredevils robotics team or their Blue Twilight counterparts from metro-area Eagan High School.

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Roundabouts or rotaries? It depends how you spin it

One of the quality-of-life improvements of moving back to Duluth after 17 years in Boston is that I no longer have to drive offensively. It also means not worrying about navigating rotaries — nightmarish traffic circles where the secret for getting across is may the most aggressive driver win.

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Resolutions reveal best intentions

ROBIN WASHINGTON COLUMN: What do our community leaders and elected officials have planned for the New Year? And how are the rest of us looking toward 2013?

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Whatever happened to? Duluth couple hopes tsunami was once-in-a-lifetime

ROBIN WASHINGTON COLUMN: The last time we saw Richard and Perry Vitullo, the couple was sitting casually in their lawn chairs, waving at the St. Louis River airboat from their back dock.

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Connecticut town’s loss is shared by all

Robin Washington column: On National Public Radio on Saturday morning, anchor Scott Simon described Newtown, Conn., as a village where “people tend to be one or two degrees of separation from each other.” With Friday’s horror, that closeness extends to the entire country, if not the world.

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For every menorah, there’s a story to tell

Robin Washington column: Hanukkah, it’s often explained, is not a major Jewish holiday. Its popularity in the U.S. is due largely to its proximity to Christmas. Still, virtually every Jewish home contains at least one menorah.

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