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ARLINGTON-8.jpeg

U.S. Navy veteran Frank Hryniewicz was buried with full military honors Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery, more than 80 years after the Massachusetts native was killed when Japan launched its Dec. 7, 1941, attack on the Pearl Harbor naval base in Hawaii. (Mike Glenn/The Washington Times)

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ARLINGTON-7.jpeg

U.S. Navy veteran Frank Hryniewicz was buried with full military honors Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery, more than 80 years after the Massachusetts native was killed when Japan launched its Dec. 7, 1941, attack on the Pearl Harbor naval base in Hawaii. (Mike Glenn/The Washington Times)

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ARLINGTON-6.jpeg

U.S. Navy veteran Frank Hryniewicz was buried with full military honors Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery, more than 80 years after the Massachusetts native was killed when Japan launched its Dec. 7, 1941, attack on the Pearl Harbor naval base in Hawaii. (Mike Glenn/The Washington Times)

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ARLINGTON-5.jpeg

U.S. Navy veteran Frank Hryniewicz was buried with full military honors Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery, more than 80 years after the Massachusetts native was killed when Japan launched its Dec. 7, 1941, attack on the Pearl Harbor naval base in Hawaii. (Mike Glenn/The Washington Times)

ARLINGTON-4.jpeg

ARLINGTON-4.jpeg

U.S. Navy veteran Frank Hryniewicz was buried with full military honors Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery, more than 80 years after the Massachusetts native was killed when Japan launched its Dec. 7, 1941, attack on the Pearl Harbor naval base in Hawaii. (Mike Glenn/The Washington Times)

ARLINGTON-3.jpeg

ARLINGTON-3.jpeg

U.S. Navy veteran Frank Hryniewicz was buried with full military honors Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery, more than 80 years after the Massachusetts native was killed when Japan launched its Dec. 7, 1941, attack on the Pearl Harbor naval base in Hawaii. (Mike Glenn/The Washington Times)

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ARLINGTON-2.jpeg

U.S. Navy veteran Frank Hryniewicz was buried with full military honors Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery, more than 80 years after the Massachusetts native was killed when Japan launched its Dec. 7, 1941, attack on the Pearl Harbor naval base in Hawaii. (Mike Glenn/The Washington Times)

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ARLINGTON-1.jpeg

U.S. Navy veteran Frank Hryniewicz was buried with full military honors Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery, more than 80 years after the Massachusetts native was killed when Japan launched its Dec. 7, 1941, attack on the Pearl Harbor naval base in Hawaii. (Mike Glenn/The Washington Times)

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U.S. Navy veteran Frank Hryniewicz was buried with full military honors Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery. (Mike Glenn/The Washington Times)

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B3 SAFA Early Release GG.jpg

The justice system, prisoner probation and federal supervision system illustration by Greg Groesch / The Washington Times

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B1hoffmanLGjohnsonintellectualhonesty.jpg

House Speaker Mike Johnson and Ronald Reagan illustration by Linas Garsys / The Washington Times

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Wisconsin limiting government overreach and empowering taxpayers through Acts 10, 21 and 39 illustration by Alexander Hunter/The Washington Times

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AP24137666282830.jpg

Sonoma State University Ming-Tung “Mike” Lee poses on campus in Rohnert Park, Calif., Monday, April 10, 2023. The chancellor of the California State University system has suspended Lee for announcing an agreement with pro-Palestinian activists to pursue an academic boycott of Israeli institutions as well as "divestment strategies." (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat via AP)

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Top of mind (Illustration by Alexander Hunter for The Washington Times)

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B3 CLAR Trade Off GG.jpg

Americans attending trade schools illustration by Greg Groesch / The Washington Times

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Women at campus protests illustration by Linas Garsys / The Washington Times

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B4 Napolitano1.jpg

Congress, the Constitution and free speech illustration by Alexander Hunter/The Washington Times

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B1 Curl1.jpg

Democrats hate Americans illustration by Alexander Hunter/The Washington Times

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BELTWAY AP20308845188220.dup~oBZmTl.jpg

President Biden with then-President Donald Trump during the first 2020 presidential debate at Case Western University and Cleveland Clinic, in Cleveland, Ohio. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File)

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... Joe Biden will still be the worst president in U.S. history. (Illustration by Alexander Hunter for The Washington Times)