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Barack Obama is a master at grabbing and keeping his audience's attention, which is the number one goal of any public speaker. How does he do it? Here are five key lessons from Obama's rhetorical playbook.

Jo-Ann Stores is posting impressive sales and earnings numbers and is an example of a retail sector on which Walmart doesn't have a steel grip.

The summer driving season is at hand, and gasoline prices are suddenly back on your mind. No wonder.

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washingtonpost.com - New Mexico
New Mexico

  • Return of the Cowgirl
    The Double E guest Ranch in southwestern New Mexico is 30,000 acres of scrub-covered hills and sandy creek-bottom land, broken here and there by steep ridges from which the landscape unrolls to the horizon in smoky vistas. But the scenery, at this particular moment, is lost on me, as I scramble to stay on the back of a horse named Buster, who has just shot several feet into the air.
  • On Route 66, the Blue Hole Beckons
    Among diving sites, there are the big fish (Great Barrier Reef, Egypt's Red Sea, Bonaire) and the small fish (U.S. lakes and quarries). And then there are the goldfish -- of Santa Rosa's Blue Hole.
  • Do You Know The Way From Santa Fe?
    If you're looking for Santa Fe's fabled lost soul, what are you doing in the Plaza? Streets paved with Gucci, Prada and their ilk may hold aesthetic and gastronomic riches, priced to match, but they won't feed your deeper hunger.
  • In New Mexico, the Un-Wild West
    Frontier historians know Cimarron, N.M., as one of the wildest places in the Old West -- a playground for notorious desperadoes such as Billy the Kid, Clay Allison, Blackjack Ketchum and Jesse James. In its late 19th-century glory days, Cimarron, with 14 saloons, four hotels and innumerable bordellos, more than lived up to its name, which means "untamed" or "wild" in Spanish. Such was the state of affairs in this boomtown along the Santa Fe Trail that a territorial newspaper once proudly reported, "Everything is quiet in Cimarron. Nobody has been killed in three days."
  • How Grotesque! How Grand!
    The fifth Santa Fe Biennial of contemporary art channels an unnatural elegance.
  • Santa Fe Soul
    Look past the tourist-clogged streets and inflated prices, and Santa Fe's true spirit will emerge.
  • Ski Issue: Powder Play
    Why Taos Ski Valley, N.M., is a purist's dream; plus, other 'old school' ski resorts.
  • A Desert Primer
    Sonoran, Chihuahuan, Mojave, Great Basin -- which desert to see in this land of big western deserts? In winter, the choice is guided by climate rather than the variety of vegetation, which would be more a factor in springtime (and which might send you to the lush Sonoran Desert).
  • The Desert in Winter
    Experience the unique rewards of visiting the desert in winter.