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FILE - In this Dec. 24, 1990, file photo, Sulome Anderson, daughter of Associated Press journalist Terry Anderson, the longest-held hostage in Lebanon, plays with her father's telephone at his office in Beirut. Sulome said a multi-year retracing of her father’s harrowing ordeal repaired their tattered relationship. Sulome describes the quest in “The Hostage’s Daughter,” a recently published book. Her effort to research the 1985 kidnapping of Terry in Beirut, Lebanon, eventually brought her face-to-face with one of his captors. Ultimately, it led her to see eye-to-eye with her father again.  (AP Photo/Ahmed Azakir, File)

FILE - In this Dec. 24, 1990, file photo, Sulome Anderson, daughter of Associated Press journalist Terry Anderson, the longest-held hostage in Lebanon, plays with her father's telephone at his office in Beirut. Sulome said a multi-year retracing of her father’s harrowing ordeal repaired their tattered relationship. Sulome describes the quest in “The Hostage’s Daughter,” a recently published book. Her effort to research the 1985 kidnapping of Terry in Beirut, Lebanon, eventually brought her face-to-face with one of his captors. Ultimately, it led her to see eye-to-eye with her father again. (AP Photo/Ahmed Azakir, File)

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