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		Washington Post editorial board no longer 
		using word 'Redskins' 
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		[August 23, 2014] 
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The 
		Washington Post editorial board will generally avoid using the word 
		"Redskins" when referring to Washington's football team, it announced on 
		Friday, saying the term denigrates Native Americans. | 
		
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			 A growing number of newspapers and sportswriters, including the 
			Post's Mike Wise, have said they will no longer use the team's 
			moniker. 
 "While we wait for the NFL to catch up with public opinion and 
			common decency we have decided not to use the slur ourselves except 
			when it is essential for clarity or effect," the board said in a 
			statement, referring to the National Football League.
 
 The editorial board controls only the paper's opinion pages and is 
			separate from the Post's news-gathering side, which will continue to 
			use the name, Marty Baron, the paper's executive editor, said.
 
 
			 
			"Standard operating policy in the newsroom has been to use the names 
			that established institutions choose for themselves," Baron said. 
			"That remains our policy, as we continue to vigorously cover 
			controversy over the team's name and avoid any advocacy role on this 
			subject."
 
 Daniel Snyder, who bought the team in 1999, has said the name honors 
			Native Americans and vowed not to change the name under any 
			circumstances.
 
 "The editorial board has been opposed to the Washington Redskins 
			name for more than 30 years," the Redskins said in a statement. "So 
			today’s announcement is no surprise.
 
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      "We just wish they would have had taken us up on our offer to visit 
		several reservations to see how much native Americans embrace and value 
		the name and use it as their own logo and mascots across this country.”
 (Reporting by Steve Ginsburg; Editing by Jonathan Allen and Eric Beech)
 
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