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Friday, May 31, 2013


10:20 p.m. J. Brooks, WTOP Sports

Nats win but Strasburg strains a muscle on his right side


7:50 p.m. Jeff Dufour, D.C. editor, Urbandaddy.com

Take a dip at a new D.C. rooftop pool bar and other ways to enjoy a steamy weekend


7:20 p.m. Ben White, Chief Economic Correspondent for Politico:

Good economic news in May triggers stock market decline


6:40 p.m. Scott Greenberg, syndicated wine columnist

Prime wines from New Zealand


4:50 p.m. Gordon Peterson, moderator of Inside Washington

Poll finds Americans don’t trust the government to do what’s right


4:20 p.m. Chris Wallace, Fox News Sunday host

Bob Goodlatte wants answers from AG Holder on media monitoring


3:50 p.m. Sue Shellenbarger, Wall Street Journal

Why face-to-face time at work is important


2:20 p.m. – Kelly Jane Torrance, film critic for the Washington Examiner

‘After Earth’ – Worth the wait?


1:50 p.m. – Clinton Yates, Washington Post

Traffic cams: Public safety and revenue makers


12:51 p.m. – Dave Ross, commentator

Reaching across party lines was easy – this time


Summer heat beats up your car, so what do you do?

WTOP’s Joan Joans reports


Data Doctors

Cut down on the paper


11:20 a.m. – Bob Orr, CBS News Justice and Homeland Security correspondent

FBI questions person of interest in ricin letters sent to President Barack Obama and New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.


9:20 a.m. – Greg Redfern, WTOP space contributor

Asteroid 1998 QE2 to pass by Earth at 4:59 p.m.


8:20 a.m. – Candy Crowley, CNN’s chief political correspondent and anchor of State of the Union with Candy Crowley

Summer will more active with Congressional investigations.


7:50 a.m. – David Gregory, moderator of NBC’s Meet the Press

Attorney General Eric Holder’s predicament with the leaking of classified information.


6:50 a.m. – John Dickerson, CBS News political director

President Obama wants a fixed rate on student loans.


Run or walk? Is one better than the other?

WTOP’s Del Walters reports.

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Emergency guide: What you should do to prepare for emergencies

WASHINGTON — Do you know what you'd do if an emergency hits? What if you're at work, your spouse is stuck in traffic and your children are in school? There's no way to plan for every emergency, but you can make sure you're prepared for different scenarios, including making a plan for your family and building a kit of emergency supplies.
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